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Crop images using coordinates and save them

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Anounymous85
Anounymous85 el 29 de En. de 2019
Comentada: Aytaç Tok el 12 de Mzo. de 2021
I am cropping an image using some x, y coordinates. After the cropping i can save the cropped image. Is there a way i can save both cropped image as well as the rest?
(What i meant by rest is the remaining part of the image, what i got after removing the cropped image).
Please help me.
Thanks!

Respuestas (3)

Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 29 de En. de 2019
Use imwrite()
imwrite(croppedImage, croppedFileName);
The original image is most likely already saved, if you read it in using imread().
  3 comentarios
Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 29 de En. de 2019
OK, and my answer will let you save that cropped image you got. I believe I answered your problem - you need to use imwrite(). First on the image you showed, then on the "other half of the image". Do you still have a problem? If so, what is it?
Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 16 de Feb. de 2019
Since it appears that the problem you're trying to communicate is that your image is not being cropped correctly, I believe you're making the common beginner mistake of assuming that arrays are indexed (x,y) instead of (y, x). The first index is y, which is row, and the second index is x, which is column. So try this:
[rows, columns] = find(binaryImage); % or [y, x] = find(binaryImage);
row1 = min(rows);
row2 = max(rows);
col1 = min(columns);
col2 = max(columns);
imwrite(binaryImage(row1:row2, col1:col2), fileName);

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Mark Sherstan
Mark Sherstan el 29 de En. de 2019
You will need to fill in the "hole" with white or black pixels. Give something like this a try:
I = imread('test.png');
J = imcrop(I,[200 200 400 600]);
I(200:600,200:800,:) = 0;
figure(1)
subplot(1,2,1); imshow(J)
subplot(1,2,2); imshow(I)
Or if you are splitting the image in half try cropping twice like so:
I = imread('test.png');
idx = size(I);
J = imcrop(I,[0 0 idx(2)/2 idx(1)]);
K = imcrop(I,[idx(2)/2 0 idx(2) idx(1)]);
figure(1)
subplot(1,2,1); imshow(J)
subplot(1,2,2); imshow(K)
  4 comentarios
Anounymous85
Anounymous85 el 16 de Feb. de 2019
I guess the first solution you have provided here can help me with what i want. Thank you!
But only problem I have is my x, y, width and height values are getting changed for different pictures. It is not easy to change those values time to time. I just want to get those values automatically, matching tto different images.
Mark Sherstan
Mark Sherstan el 16 de Feb. de 2019
How does your area change from picture to picture? Can you find the size of the image and then just take a percentage of that? E.g:
I = imread('test.png');
[height, width, ~] = size(I);
J = imcrop(I,[0 0 width/2 height]);
imshow(J)

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Aytaç Tok
Aytaç Tok el 11 de Mzo. de 2021
How do I crop a picture using border coordinates.I have 1695x2 size limit values. How do I crop the object inside these values ​​from the original picture?
  2 comentarios
Image Analyst
Image Analyst el 11 de Mzo. de 2021
You can use imcrop() or indexing. If you need additional help, start a new question and attach your image, and a mat file with your "limit values" or "boundary coordinates" in a .zip file with the paper clip icon.
Aytaç Tok
Aytaç Tok el 12 de Mzo. de 2021
I shared the image.I just want to crop the banana picture here, so the rgb banana picture in the nerve pixel values
clc;close all;clear all
e=imread('muzpp.jpeg');
l=imbinarize(rgb2gray(e));
grayImage=rgb2gray(e);
gri=grayImage;
[r c]=size(l);
sb=imbinarize(gri);
sb=bwareaopen(sb,10);
se=strel('disk',5);
sb=imclose(sb,se);
sb=imfill(sb,'holes');
se2=strel('disk',30);
sb2=imerode(sb,se2);
[etiket nesnesayisi]=bwlabel(sb2,4);
[sinirkordinatlari etiketler]=bwboundaries(sb2);
[etiketler nesnesayisi]=bwlabel(sb2,4);
for k=1:length(sinirkordinatlari)
sinir=sinirkordinatlari{k};
end
imshow(e)

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