imcrop can not work for a .fig file
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When I use this function,
I = openfig('filename.fig');
J = imcrop(I,rect)
output:
Error using imcrop>checkCData (line 412)
Invalid input image.
Error in imcrop>parseInputs (line 256)
checkCData(a);
Error in imcrop (line 93)
[x,y,a,cm,spatial_rect,h_image,placement_cancelled] = parseInputs(varargin{:});
But when use another (below), it works.
[J,rect2] = imcrop(___)
Can another people help? thanks.
4 Comments
doc openfig
returns a figure object, i.e. the window containing the axes. You need actual image data. With numerous assumptions on what is actually in the figure you can get this data as e.g.
hFig = openfig( ... );
hAxes = hFig.CurrentAxes;
hImage = hAxes.Children;
I = hImage.CData;
It's a very brittle way to achieve this though. image data should be stored in image files or in .mat files that you can load the actual data in from and use that directly rather than having to fish the data out of a figure.
The above assumes you have 1 axes in the figure and that the only thing in that axes is the image which you want.
Winston
on 24 Mar 2020
Walter Roberson
on 24 Mar 2020
I notice that you have a matlab.ui.Figure, also known as a uifigure, which is produced by App Designer. I did not know that you could get a .fig from App Designer. Using CurrentAxes and so on is for old style figures. I do not have any uifigure around to test with.
Adam
on 25 Mar 2020
Sorry, corrected that now. I thought the property was 'Axes' first, then double-checked, found it was 'CurrentAxes' and didn't realise I hadn't removed the first attempt!
Answers (1)
Walter Roberson
on 24 Mar 2020
Edited: Walter Roberson
on 24 Mar 2020
0 votes
https://www.mathworks.com/help/images/ref/imhandles.html can be used to locate the images in fig. Note that more than one could potentially be returned in general.
10 Comments
Winston
on 24 Mar 2020
Walter Roberson
on 24 Mar 2020
Edited: Walter Roberson
on 2 Apr 2020
h = openfig('defocus6_-51.04.fig');
I = imhandles(h);
numimg = length(I);
if numimg == 0
error('figure does not have any images.')
end
J = cell(numimg);
for K = 1 : numimg
J{K} = imcrop(I(K), [372, 177, 346, 273]);
end
fprintf('%d images cropped into J\n', numimg);
Walter Roberson
on 2 Apr 2020
Edited: Walter Roberson
on 2 Apr 2020
Sorry, I fixed the typing mistake.
Winston
on 2 Apr 2020
Edited: Walter Roberson
on 2 Apr 2020
Walter Roberson
on 2 Apr 2020
h = openfig('defocus1_-76.04.fig');
I = imhandles(h);
numimg = length(I);
if numimg == 0
error('figure does not have any images.')
end
J = cell(numimg, 1);
for K = 1 : numimg
J{K} = imcrop(I(K).CData, [44, 166, 50, 50]);
end
fprintf('%d images cropped into J\n', numimg);
This might not be exactly what you want. You are on the border between asking for an interactive cropping tool, or automatically cropping at a fixed location, but you cannot do both at the same time: you can only specify a crop rectangle when you do not use an interactive cropping tool. The code I show here guesses that you wanted to crop a particular rectangle instead of invoking the interactive cropping tool.
Winston
on 23 May 2020
Walter Roberson
on 23 May 2020
.fig are not image files, they are complicated data structures. A .fig is effectively an entire figure window, not a particular image within the figure. You cannot crop an entire figure.
What shows up for
min(J{1}(:))
max(J{1}(:))
class(J{1})
size(J{1})
Winston
on 24 May 2020
Walter Roberson
on 24 May 2020
imshow(J{1} ,[])
imcrop includes the border, except when it does not include the border. I filed a bug report on it years ago.
I recommend using matrix indexing instead of imcrop when you already know where you want to crop.
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