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mat.reshape not working

asked 2016-03-24 02:46:02 -0600

Nbb gravatar image

updated 2016-03-24 03:47:51 -0600

Hello I have a matrix M 3x3

I use reshape(0,9) so the M.at(0,1) should be the 4th element but it becomes the 2nd element. Help please. If i am wrong then please tell me how do i convert a 2D matrix into a 1D column vector.

EDIT: I dunno how to show the code. Its too big

My matrix is 92 x 112. some of the data below.

-40 -39

-44

....

In matlab if i reshape it becomes

-40

-44

...

-39

-39 becomes the 93rd element. In opencv I reshape it becomes

-40

-39

....

-39 becomes the SECOND element and i dunno where the -44 goes to. I used M.reshape(0,92*112). Matlab is giving me the right answer

Here is the short piece of code that I have

        cout << Im.at<float>(0,0) << endl;
        cout << Im.at<float>(0,1) << endl;
        waitKey(0);

        // Reshape to column vector -- Wrong
        Mat temp;
        Im.reshape(0, 92*112).copyTo(temp);

        cout << temp.at<float>(0,0) << endl;
        cout << temp.at<float>(1,0) << endl;

What I am getting above is that the elements in (0,0) and (0,1) are equal to (0,0) and (1,0) after being reshaped. Im(0,1) should be equal to temp(113,0) or temp(93,0) but I am not getting such values. Is there another function to reshape a 2D Mat ?

EDIT: Okay it seems like my understanding of the reshape function was totally wrong. Thanks again berak. I had thought OpenCV would go 'down' the array but it seems like OpenCV would move from top left to bottom right

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Comments

please show us your code.

berak gravatar imageberak ( 2016-03-24 02:52:46 -0600 )edit

I have tried it and it works for small matrices but not big ones. is there another function that I can try

Nbb gravatar imageNbb ( 2016-03-24 03:04:04 -0600 )edit
  • "so the M.at(0,1) should be the 4th element" -- why do you think so ?
  • "but it becomes the 2nd element" -- that's correct for the 3x3 case, for the 1x9 case, you're out of bounds. c++ starts indexing from 0, matlab from 1.
berak gravatar imageberak ( 2016-03-24 03:04:41 -0600 )edit
1

be extra careful, when moving between opencv/c++ and matlab. again, there's a lot of assumptions:

  • opencv/c++ starts indexing from 0, matlab/fortan from 1
  • opencv Mat's are row-major (like in memory), matlab is col-major
  • if there are channels, they are interleaved in opencv, but consecutive in matlab
  • ... and lots more, that i can't remember
berak gravatar imageberak ( 2016-03-24 03:56:43 -0600 )edit

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answered 2016-03-24 03:09:23 -0600

berak gravatar image

updated 2016-03-24 03:35:01 -0600

your reshape is correct, but then, you seem to have trouble with different indexing conventions between c++ in general, and matlab.

please, when in doubt, you should run a debug build, a lot of important assertions are suppressed in release.

here's some code to illustrate it:

Mat_<float> m(3,3); m << 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9;    
cerr << m << endl;

[1, 2, 3;
 4, 5, 6;
 7, 8, 9]

cerr << m(0,1) << endl;
2

cerr << m(1,0) << endl;
4


Mat_<float> m2 = m.reshape(0,9);   
cerr << m2 << endl;
[1;
 2;
 3;
 4;
 5;
 6;
 7;
 8;
 9]

// out of bounds:
cerr << m2(0,1) << endl;

OpenCV Error: Assertion failed ((unsigned)i1 < (unsigned)size.p[1]) in cv::Mat_<float>::operator (), file E:\code\opencv\build\install\include\opencv2/core/mat.
inl.hpp, line 1602

// this would be the correct way for a 1d col-mat:
cerr << m2(1,0) << endl;
2

[edit:]

it seems, you want the transposed mat reshaped:

Mat mt = m.t();
cerr << mt << endl;
[1, 4, 7;
 2, 5, 8;
 3, 6, 9]

cerr << mt.reshape(0,9) << endl;
[1;
 4;
 7;
 2;
 5;
 8;
 3;
 6;
 9]
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Asked: 2016-03-24 02:46:02 -0600

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Last updated: Mar 24 '16