Using OpenCV python, I want to make a grid when I switch on my camera. Can you guys help me with a logic or code. Please find the image link below for better understanding.
4 Answers
Here's a simple solution for creating an m x n grid:
import cv2 as cv # tested with version 4.5.3.56 (pip install opencv-python)
import numpy as np
def draw_grid(img, grid_shape, color=(0, 255, 0), thickness=1):
h, w, _ = img.shape
rows, cols = grid_shape
dy, dx = h / rows, w / cols
# draw vertical lines
for x in np.linspace(start=dx, stop=w-dx, num=cols-1):
x = int(round(x))
cv.line(img, (x, 0), (x, h), color=color, thickness=thickness)
# draw horizontal lines
for y in np.linspace(start=dy, stop=h-dy, num=rows-1):
y = int(round(y))
cv.line(img, (0, y), (w, y), color=color, thickness=thickness)
return img
Here's a script that wraps this function in a CLI: https://gist.github.com/mathandy/389ddbad48810d188bdc997c3a1dab0c
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Excellent solution - flexible and detailed code. Should be marked as answer over current answer– dbmitchJun 25 at 20:39
Here is the solution for my question guys. Make use of it.
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
import matplotlib.ticker as plticker
try:
from PIL import Image
except ImportError:
import Image
# Open image file
image = Image.open('bird.jpg')
my_dpi=200.
# Set up figure
fig=plt.figure(figsize=(float(image.size[0])/my_dpi,float(image.size[1])/my_dpi),dpi=my_dpi)
ax=fig.add_subplot(111)
# Remove whitespace from around the image
fig.subplots_adjust(left=0,right=1,bottom=0,top=1)
# Set the gridding interval: here we use the major tick interval
myInterval=300.
loc = plticker.MultipleLocator(base=myInterval)
ax.xaxis.set_major_locator(loc)
ax.yaxis.set_major_locator(loc)
# Add the grid
ax.grid(which='major', axis='both', linestyle='-', color='g')
# Add the image
ax.imshow(image)
# Find number of gridsquares in x and y direction
nx=abs(int(float(ax.get_xlim()[1]-ax.get_xlim()[0])/float(myInterval)))
ny=abs(int(float(ax.get_ylim()[1]-ax.get_ylim()[0])/float(myInterval)))
# Save the figure
fig.savefig('birdgrid_without_Label.jpg')
def draw_grid(img, line_color=(0, 255, 0), thickness=1, type_=_cv2.LINE_AA, pxstep=50):
'''(ndarray, 3-tuple, int, int) -> void
draw gridlines on img
line_color:
BGR representation of colour
thickness:
line thickness
type:
8, 4 or cv2.LINE_AA
pxstep:
grid line frequency in pixels
'''
x = pxstep
y = pxstep
while x < img.shape[1]:
_cv2.line(img, (x, 0), (x, img.shape[0]), color=line_color, lineType=type_, thickness=thickness)
x += pxstep
while y < img.shape[0]:
_cv2.line(img, (0, y), (img.shape[1], y), color=line_color, lineType=type_, thickness=thickness)
y += pxstep
You can draw lines on the input image using the cv2.line() function. So depending on where you want to draw the lines, your basic code will look like:
img = cv2.imread(r"path\to\img")
cv2.line(img, (start_x, start_y), (end_x, end_y), (255, 0, 0), 1, 1)
To get the dimensions of the image, you can use img.shape
which will return (height, width)
.
To draw a vertical line through the center for example, your code would look like:
cv2.line(img, (int(img.shape[1]/2), 0),(int(img.shape[1]/2), img.shape[0]), (255, 0, 0), 1, 1)