Images don't show with imshow after converting them to double.
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Adrian
el 2 de Oct. de 2013
Comentada: Image Analyst
el 4 de Dic. de 2017
Hello all,
I have a very simple code, pic.png is a greyscale image:
I = imread('pic.png');
imshow(I); %displays the picture without problems
I = double(I);
imshow(I) %only displays white, nothing more.
I find this weird, why does it do this?
3 comentarios
Image Analyst
el 11 de Oct. de 2015
Not necessarily. What if your double image is an array of temperatures? Using im2double() would cause all of the temperatures to change, which would be a major inconvenience to you.
Walter Roberson
el 11 de Oct. de 2015
im2double() is discussed in the existing Answers, with reasoning and possible disadvantages discussed as well.
Respuesta aceptada
Walter Roberson
el 2 de Oct. de 2013
MATLAB looks at the datatype to decide which range of values to expect. uint8 are expected to be 0 to 255. double are expected to be 0 to 1. When you double() a uint8 you end up with 0. to 255. and everyt value from 1 upwards will be considered to saturate the maximum 9 to 1 range.
You im2double() instead of double()
Más respuestas (4)
Image Analyst
el 2 de Oct. de 2013
I wouldn't use im2double. It's usually inconvenient to scale your image when you want to do some operations, like convolution or whatever. All you need to do is to simply use [] in imshow():
imshow(yourDoubleImage, []);
and it will work beautifully for gray scale images. If it's a color image though, that won't work, you'd have to case to uint8 to display or use im2double and, unfortunately, have to deal with altered intensity values. I prefer the casting to uint8 which usually works if your values remain in the range of about 0-255. Step through this demo and it will illustrate the different things that happen depending on what you do.
% Read in a gray scale image and make it double
% in the range 0-255.
doubleGrayImage = double(imread('moon.tif'));
subplot(2,2,1);
imshow(doubleGrayImage, []) % Doesn't look right.
% Read in a gray scale image and make it double
% in the range 0-1.
doubleGrayImage = im2double(imread('moon.tif'));
subplot(2,2,2);
imshow(doubleGrayImage, []) % Doesn't look right.
% Read in an image and make it double
% in the range 0-255.
doubleRGBImage = double(imread('peppers.png'));
subplot(2,2,3);
imshow(doubleRGBImage, []) % Doesn't look right.
% Read in an image and make it double
% in the range 0-1.
doubleRGBImage = im2double(imread('peppers.png'));
subplot(2,2,4);
imshow(doubleRGBImage) % Now looks right, but values are changed.
Sean de Wolski
el 2 de Oct. de 2013
You could also just show it over the full range by using the [] input to imshow:
imshow(I,[])
0 comentarios
Amit Nambiar
el 2 de Oct. de 2013
I=uint8(round(I-1))
imshow(I)
do this to convert and show a double image...
Visweshwar Srinivasan
el 4 de Dic. de 2017
Simple! See, double values are just integer values, the reason why imshow doesn't work with double values is because it is made to work only with 8bit values. Hence, either convert double values to 8 bit integer values using uint8([double value]) command or use the im2double() statement which does this internally!
2 comentarios
Stephen23
el 4 de Dic. de 2017
Editada: Stephen23
el 4 de Dic. de 2017
"reason why imshow doesn't work with double values is because it is made to work only with 8bit values"
Actually imshow works perfectly with double values.
Note that the solution Image Analyst gave is simpler, and does not require changing the data itself:
imshow(yourDoubleImage, [])
Image Analyst
el 4 de Dic. de 2017
"double values are just integer values" is another incorrect statement.
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