1 | initial version |
no, no such thing built in.
you simply set up your Mat, and fill it with numbers, maually:
Mat m(1,10,CV_64F); // 10 doubles in a single row
for (int i=0; i<10; i++)
m.at<double>(0,i) = i; // set the column in row 0
note, that there are notorious differences between c++ and matlab, like 0 or 1 based indexing.
2 | No.2 Revision |
no, no such thing built in.
you simply set up your Mat, and fill it with numbers, maually:manually:
Mat m(1,10,CV_64F); // 10 doubles in a single row
for (int i=0; i<10; i++)
m.at<double>(0,i) = i; // set the column in row 0
note, that there are notorious differences between c++ and matlab, like 0 or 1 based indexing.
3 | No.3 Revision |
no, no such thing built in.
you simply set up your Mat, and fill it with numbers, manually:
Mat m(1,10,CV_64F); // 10 doubles in a single row
for (int i=0; i<10; i++)
m.at<double>(0,i) = i; // set the column in row 0
note, that there are notorious differences between c++ and matlab, like 0 or 1 based indexing.indexing, so careful !