17

Is there anything like cv::Mat::contains(cv::Rect) in Opencv?

Background: After detecting objects as contours and trying to access ROIs by using cv::boundingRect my application crashed. OK, that's because the bounding rects of the object close to image border may be not entirely within the image.

Now I skip the objects not entirely in image by this check:

if(
  cellRect.x>0 && 
  cellRect.y>0 && 
  cellRect.x + cellRect.width < m.cols && 
  cellRect.x + cellRect.width < m.rows) ...

where cellRect is the bounding rect of the object and m is the image. I hope there is a dedicated opencv function for this.

3 Answers 3

31

Simple way is to use the AND (i.e. &) operator.

Assume you want to check if cv::Rect rect is inside cv::Mat mat:

bool is_inside = (rect & cv::Rect(0, 0, mat.cols, mat.rows)) == rect;
4
  • Probably not the fast solution, but interesting one. (rect & rect_mat) would create a new Mat object and == would compare all cells. This will be for sure slower, than getting and compating 4 numbers x,y,w,h.
    – Valentin H
    Sep 3, 2015 at 11:52
  • 4
    @ValentinHeinitz Not a new Mat, a new Rect actually, which is basicly just 4 numbers (x, y, width, height). So it should be relatively fast. :P Sep 3, 2015 at 12:15
  • 1
    OK, got it! Now it looks elegant indeed!
    – Valentin H
    Sep 3, 2015 at 12:45
  • The parentheses around operator & is important. I got a nonsense error without that.
    – Burak
    May 15, 2021 at 16:15
5

You can create rect "representing"(x,y = 0, width and height equal to image width and height) your image and check whether it contains bounding rects of your contours. To achieve that you need to use rect intersection - in OpenCV it's very simple, just use rect1 & rect2. Hope that code makes it clear:

cv::Rect imgRect = cv::Rect(cv::Point(0,0), img.size());
cv::Rect objectBoundingRect = ....;
cv::Rect rectsIntersecion = imgRect & objectBoundingRect;
if (rectsIntersecion.area() == 0)
  //object is completely outside image
else if (rectsIntersecion.area() == objectBoundingRect.area()) 
  //whole object is inside image
else 
  //((double)rectsIntersecion.area())/((double)objectBoundingRect.area()) * 100.0 % of object is inside image
2
  • Interesting! I'd never intuitively grasp, that & means intersection in OpenCV. Good to know! So it looks like there is no built-in function like Rect::contains(Rect)? Why? it seems to me that this is a very common and useful function.
    – Valentin H
    Mar 19, 2015 at 9:30
  • 3
    I think that there is no such function, because one rect can contains other rect in 100%, not at all(0%) or in any part between 0-100%. If you want to check whether rect1 contains rect2 completely just use this code bool contains = (rect1 & rect2).area() == rect2.area(). Note that this code will return true if rect2.area() will be 0 (so width or height will be equal to 0), if you don' want this, use this code: bool contains = rect2.area() && (rect1 & rect2).area() == rect2.area(). Hope it's what you need :)
    – cyriel
    Mar 19, 2015 at 13:14
-1

Here is a method to judge whether a rectangle contains an other rectangle. you can get the size info from cv::Mat first, and then use method below:

public bool rectContainsRect(Rectangle containerRect, Rectangle subRect)
{
    if( containerRect.Contains(new Point(subRect.Left, subRect.Top)) 
        && containerRect.Contains(new Point(subRect.Right, subRect.Top))
        && containerRect.Contains(new Point(subRect.Left, subRect.Bottom))
        && containerRect.Contains(new Point(subRect.Right, subRect.Bottom)))
    {
        return true;
    }
    return false;
}
1

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