The value for both CV_32F
and CV_32FC1
is 5
(see explanation below), so numerically there is no difference.
However:
CV_32F
defines the depth of each element of the matrix, while
CV_32FC1
defines both the depth of each element and the number of channels.
A few examples...
Many functions, e.g. Sobel or convertTo, require the destination depth (and not the number of channels), so you do:
Sobel(src, dst, CV_32F, 1, 0);
src.convertTo(dst, CV_32F);
But, when creating a matrix for example, you must also specify the number of channels, so:
Mat m(rows, cols, CV_32FC1);
Basically, every time you should also specify the number of channels, use CV_32FCx
. If you just need the depth, use CV_32F
CV_32F
is defined as:
#define CV_32F 5
while CV_32FC1
is defined as:
#define CV_CN_SHIFT 3
#define CV_DEPTH_MAX (1 << CV_CN_SHIFT)
#define CV_MAT_DEPTH_MASK (CV_DEPTH_MAX - 1)
#define CV_MAT_DEPTH(flags) ((flags) & CV_MAT_DEPTH_MASK)
#define CV_MAKETYPE(depth,cn) (CV_MAT_DEPTH(depth) + (((cn)-1) << CV_CN_SHIFT))
#define CV_32FC1 CV_MAKETYPE(CV_32F,1)
which evaluates to 5
.
You can check this with:
#include <opencv2\opencv.hpp>
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
std::cout << CV_32F << std::endl;
std::cout << CV_32FC1 << std::endl;
return 0;
}