# How to turn shape in jpg image into coordinates. Explained please. Python

I am trying to input the image, L shaped image in black:

into my Python code and receive back the coordinates of each corner. I get confused with the pixel approach of cv2 and am trying to figure out a way to create two arrays, x and y, of the corners. Examples for this shape could return:

x = [1, 3, 3, 9, 9, 2, 2, 1]
y = [1, 1, 9, 9, 11, 11, 10, 10]

• Welcome to SO! It's not clear, at least for me, what are you trying to accomplish. Do you want to use or not the cv2 approach? – Hemerson Tacon Aug 8 '20 at 17:14
• @HemersonTacon I am open using the cv2 approach, but I am a little unfamiliar with it and unsure how to turn the complex coordinates of the pixels into simple coordinates as shown in my question. – Sam Aug 8 '20 at 17:25

I followed this tutorial to achieve a corner detection:

import numpy as np
import cv2

gray = cv2.cvtColor(img,cv2.COLOR_BGR2GRAY)
gray = np.float32(gray)

corners = cv2.goodFeaturesToTrack(gray, 100, 0.01, 10)
corners = np.int0(corners)

for corner in corners:
x,y = corner.ravel()
#x and y are your values of the lsit
cv2.circle(img,(x,y),3,255,-1)

cv2.imshow('Corner',img)
cv2.waitKey()


This result looks like this: The Blue dots are the corners.

• Welcome to SO! Please take a moment to read this guide and try to improve your answer. – Hemerson Tacon Aug 8 '20 at 17:16
• While this link may answer the question, it is better to include the essential parts of the answer here and provide the link for reference. Link-only answers can become invalid if the linked page changes. - From Review – Roberto Caboni Aug 8 '20 at 17:19
• edited the answer. Sorry for bad answer hope this is better! – SirBaum Aug 8 '20 at 17:32
• @SirBaum Thank you so much for the helpful link! I achieved the same result. But I am more looking to make two arrays, one of x and one y, for the corners. I am having trouble converting the corner pixel coords into useful coordinates for my program. For example, I am getting [[[570 781]] [[326 537]] [[977 537]] [[977 374]] [[326 374]] [[733 781]] [[733 130]] [[570 130]] [[568 539]] [[735 539]] [[735 372]] [[568 372]]] .... – Sam Aug 8 '20 at 17:40
• @SirBaum You are right, the ravel() function doesnt seem to store the coordinates for me too well, so I am going to try to append through the for loop to get my arrays. Thank you! – Sam Aug 8 '20 at 17:51