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I am new to Point Cloud Library (PCL) and C++ programming. I have a simple code to load multiple .ply files and visualize them using the code below. It iterates through a loop to load multiple .ply files given as the arguments (say test0.ply, test1.ply ... test99.ply) and visualize them one after another. I need to visualize them as fast as possible possible like as if they are frames of a video.

This is what I've tried so far. Previously spinOnce() was placed outside of my loop and I was not seeing anything. But then I just moved it inside the loop and iterate through the list and try to visualize them. Now it works, however, it is VERY slow (only 1 FPS?!!)

What is going wrong? How should I change the code to show models with a faster pace?

#include <iostream>

#include <pcl/io/pcd_io.h>
#include <pcl/io/ply_io.h>
#include <pcl/point_cloud.h>
#include <pcl/console/parse.h>
#include <pcl/common/transforms.h>
#include <pcl/visualization/pcl_visualizer.h>

// This function displays the help
void showHelp(char *program_name)
{
    std::cout << std::endl;
    std::cout << "Usage: " << program_name << " cloud_filename.[pcd|ply]" << std::endl;
    std::cout << "-h: Show this help." << std::endl; 
}

// Main function
int main(int argc,char **argv)
{
    // Show help
    if(pcl::console::find_switch(argc,argv,"-h") || pcl::console::find_switch(argc,argv,"--help"))
    {
        showHelp(argv[0]);
        return 0; 
    }

    // Fetch point cloud filename in arguments | Works with PLY files
    std::vector<int> filenames;

    filenames = pcl::console::parse_file_extension_argument(argc,argv,".ply");



    // Visualization 
    printf("\n Point cloud colors :\n"
        " \t white \t = \t original point cloud \n");

    pcl::visualization::PCLVisualizer viewer(" Point Cloud Visualizer");
    viewer.setBackgroundColor(0.05,0.05,0.05,0); // Set background to a dark grey

    // Load file | Works with PLY files
    pcl::PointCloud<pcl::PointXYZRGB>::Ptr source_cloud (new pcl::PointCloud<pcl::PointXYZRGB> ());

for(int i=0; i<argc-1; i++)
{

cout<<argv[filenames[i]]<<endl;

        if(pcl::io::loadPLYFile(argv[filenames[i]],*source_cloud) < 0)
        {
            std::cout << "Error loading point cloud " << argv[filenames[i+1]] << std::endl << std::endl;
            showHelp (argv[i+1]);
            return -1;
        }


    // Define R,G,B colors for the point cloud 
    pcl::visualization::PointCloudColorHandlerRGBField<pcl::PointXYZRGB> rgb(source_cloud);
//  pcl::visualization::PointCloudColorHandlerCustom<pcl::PointXYZ> source_cloud_color_handler(source_cloud,255,255,255); // White

    // We add the point cloud to the viewer and pass the color handler 
if(i!=0){
    viewer.removePointCloud("original_cloud"+(i-1));
}
    viewer.addPointCloud(source_cloud,rgb,"original_cloud"+i);
    viewer.setPointCloudRenderingProperties(pcl::visualization::PCL_VISUALIZER_POINT_SIZE,2,"original_cloud"+i);

viewer.spinOnce(100, true);
    }

        return 0;
    } // End main()
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  • What is it that you have problem with? What have you tried and how the results differ from what you'd expect?
    – KjMag
    Jul 11, 2017 at 5:50
  • I'm looking for a way to pipeline specially in the network case. Maybe while a new file is being delivered we start visualizing the previous one, assuming we have enough buffered data.
    – user8071576
    Jul 11, 2017 at 13:45
  • For animation, "as fast as possible" is not usually what you want. You really want to display each frame for some specific duration, like 1/24 of a second.
    – Alex
    Jul 12, 2017 at 17:39
  • @Alex Right. Whatever the loop allows me. But currently nothing is being shown.
    – user8071576
    Jul 12, 2017 at 17:43
  • @Alex I want to find out the FPS and evaluate how fast PCL rendering and visualization can be.
    – user8071576
    Jul 12, 2017 at 17:52

1 Answer 1

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Your previous animation loop was running as fast as possible:

while(!viewer.wasStopped()){
    viewer.spinOnce();
}

That probably meant it was rendering the images faster than you could see. If you want maximum speed, you could put in some timing code there to measure how long each frame takes.

Now your animation loop is the same as your file-reading loop, so each frame will take at least as long as it takes to read a file from disk/SSD with pcl::io::loadPLYFile. It's not surprising that the filesystem, storage, file interpretation, and rendering together would take about 1 second per file.

If you want a smooth animation, put a delay in your original, fast loop:

import <thread>

while(!viewer.wasStopped()){
    viewer.spinOnce();
    std::this_thread::sleep_for(0.04s);
}
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  • Your are absolutely right on the disk delay. It is because of the disk delay. We might need to do a buffering or maybe some pipeline.
    – user8071576
    Jul 12, 2017 at 19:26
  • Compiler picks on your code: This requires compiler and library support for the ISO C++ 2011.
    – user8071576
    Jul 12, 2017 at 19:27
  • btw, no method named as wasStoppedspinOnce()
    – user8071576
    Jul 12, 2017 at 19:35

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