OpenCV 4.10.0-dev
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cv::Mat Class Reference

n-dimensional dense array class More...

#include <opencv2/core/mat.hpp>

Collaboration diagram for cv::Mat:

Public Types

enum  {
  MAGIC_VAL = 0x42FF0000 ,
  AUTO_STEP = 0 ,
  CONTINUOUS_FLAG = CV_MAT_CONT_FLAG ,
  SUBMATRIX_FLAG = CV_SUBMAT_FLAG
}
 
enum  {
  MAGIC_MASK = 0xFFFF0000 ,
  TYPE_MASK = 0x00000FFF ,
  DEPTH_MASK = 7
}
 

Public Member Functions

 Mat () CV_NOEXCEPT
 
 Mat (const cuda::GpuMat &m)
 download data from GpuMat
 
 Mat (const Mat &m)
 
 Mat (const Mat &m, const Range &rowRange, const Range &colRange=Range::all())
 
 Mat (const Mat &m, const Range *ranges)
 
 Mat (const Mat &m, const Rect &roi)
 
 Mat (const Mat &m, const std::vector< Range > &ranges)
 
template<typename _Tp >
 Mat (const MatCommaInitializer_< _Tp > &commaInitializer)
 
template<typename _Tp , int m, int n>
 Mat (const Matx< _Tp, m, n > &mtx, bool copyData=true)
 
template<typename _Tp >
 Mat (const Point3_< _Tp > &pt, bool copyData=true)
 
template<typename _Tp >
 Mat (const Point_< _Tp > &pt, bool copyData=true)
 
template<typename _Tp , size_t _Nm>
 Mat (const std::array< _Tp, _Nm > &arr, bool copyData=false)
 
template<typename _Tp , typename = typename std::enable_if<std::is_arithmetic<_Tp>::value>::type>
 Mat (const std::initializer_list< _Tp > list)
 
template<typename _Tp >
 Mat (const std::initializer_list< int > sizes, const std::initializer_list< _Tp > list)
 
template<typename _Tp >
 Mat (const std::vector< _Tp > &vec, bool copyData=false)
 
 Mat (const std::vector< int > &sizes, int type)
 
 Mat (const std::vector< int > &sizes, int type, const Scalar &s)
 
 Mat (const std::vector< int > &sizes, int type, void *data, const size_t *steps=0)
 
template<typename _Tp , int n>
 Mat (const Vec< _Tp, n > &vec, bool copyData=true)
 
 Mat (int ndims, const int *sizes, int type)
 
 Mat (int ndims, const int *sizes, int type, const Scalar &s)
 
 Mat (int ndims, const int *sizes, int type, void *data, const size_t *steps=0)
 
 Mat (int rows, int cols, int type)
 
 Mat (int rows, int cols, int type, const Scalar &s)
 
 Mat (int rows, int cols, int type, void *data, size_t step=AUTO_STEP)
 
 Mat (Mat &&m) CV_NOEXCEPT
 
 Mat (Size size, int type)
 
 Mat (Size size, int type, const Scalar &s)
 
 Mat (Size size, int type, void *data, size_t step=AUTO_STEP)
 
 ~Mat ()
 destructor - calls release()
 
void addref ()
 Increments the reference counter.
 
MatadjustROI (int dtop, int dbottom, int dleft, int dright)
 Adjusts a submatrix size and position within the parent matrix.
 
void assignTo (Mat &m, int type=-1) const
 Provides a functional form of convertTo.
 
template<typename _Tp >
_Tpat (const int *idx)
 
template<typename _Tp >
const _Tpat (const int *idx) const
 
template<typename _Tp , int n>
_Tpat (const Vec< int, n > &idx)
 
template<typename _Tp , int n>
const _Tpat (const Vec< int, n > &idx) const
 
template<typename _Tp >
_Tpat (int i0, int i1, int i2)
 
template<typename _Tp >
const _Tpat (int i0, int i1, int i2) const
 
template<typename _Tp >
_Tpat (int i0=0)
 Returns a reference to the specified array element.
 
template<typename _Tp >
const _Tpat (int i0=0) const
 
template<typename _Tp >
_Tpat (int row, int col)
 
template<typename _Tp >
const _Tpat (int row, int col) const
 
template<typename _Tp >
_Tpat (Point pt)
 
template<typename _Tp >
const _Tpat (Point pt) const
 
template<typename _Tp >
MatIterator_< _Tpbegin ()
 Returns the matrix iterator and sets it to the first matrix element.
 
template<typename _Tp >
MatConstIterator_< _Tpbegin () const
 
int channels () const
 Returns the number of matrix channels.
 
int checkVector (int elemChannels, int depth=-1, bool requireContinuous=true) const
 
CV_NODISCARD_STD Mat clone () const
 Creates a full copy of the array and the underlying data.
 
Mat col (int x) const
 Creates a matrix header for the specified matrix column.
 
Mat colRange (const Range &r) const
 
Mat colRange (int startcol, int endcol) const
 Creates a matrix header for the specified column span.
 
void convertTo (OutputArray m, int rtype, double alpha=1, double beta=0) const
 Converts an array to another data type with optional scaling.
 
void copySize (const Mat &m)
 internal use function; properly re-allocates _size, _step arrays
 
void copyTo (OutputArray m) const
 Copies the matrix to another one.
 
void copyTo (OutputArray m, InputArray mask) const
 
void create (const std::vector< int > &sizes, int type)
 
void create (int ndims, const int *sizes, int type)
 
void create (int rows, int cols, int type)
 Allocates new array data if needed.
 
void create (Size size, int type)
 
Mat cross (InputArray m) const
 Computes a cross-product of two 3-element vectors.
 
void deallocate ()
 internal use function, consider to use 'release' method instead; deallocates the matrix data
 
int depth () const
 Returns the depth of a matrix element.
 
Mat diag (int d=0) const
 Extracts a diagonal from a matrix.
 
double dot (InputArray m) const
 Computes a dot-product of two vectors.
 
size_t elemSize () const
 Returns the matrix element size in bytes.
 
size_t elemSize1 () const
 Returns the size of each matrix element channel in bytes.
 
bool empty () const
 Returns true if the array has no elements.
 
template<typename _Tp >
MatIterator_< _Tpend ()
 Returns the matrix iterator and sets it to the after-last matrix element.
 
template<typename _Tp >
MatConstIterator_< _Tpend () const
 
template<typename _Tp , typename Functor >
void forEach (const Functor &operation)
 Runs the given functor over all matrix elements in parallel.
 
template<typename _Tp , typename Functor >
void forEach (const Functor &operation) const
 
UMat getUMat (AccessFlag accessFlags, UMatUsageFlags usageFlags=USAGE_DEFAULT) const
 retrieve UMat from Mat
 
MatExpr inv (int method=DECOMP_LU) const
 Inverses a matrix.
 
bool isContinuous () const
 Reports whether the matrix is continuous or not.
 
bool isSubmatrix () const
 returns true if the matrix is a submatrix of another matrix
 
void locateROI (Size &wholeSize, Point &ofs) const
 Locates the matrix header within a parent matrix.
 
MatExpr mul (InputArray m, double scale=1) const
 Performs an element-wise multiplication or division of the two matrices.
 
template<typename _Tp , int m, int n>
 operator Matx< _Tp, m, n > () const
 
template<typename _Tp , std::size_t _Nm>
 operator std::array< _Tp, _Nm > () const
 
template<typename _Tp >
 operator std::vector< _Tp > () const
 
template<typename _Tp , int n>
 operator Vec< _Tp, n > () const
 
Mat operator() (const Range *ranges) const
 
Mat operator() (const Rect &roi) const
 
Mat operator() (const std::vector< Range > &ranges) const
 
Mat operator() (Range rowRange, Range colRange) const
 Extracts a rectangular submatrix.
 
Matoperator= (const Mat &m)
 assignment operators
 
Matoperator= (const MatExpr &expr)
 
Matoperator= (const Scalar &s)
 Sets all or some of the array elements to the specified value.
 
Matoperator= (Mat &&m)
 
void pop_back (size_t nelems=1)
 Removes elements from the bottom of the matrix.
 
ucharptr (const int *idx)
 
template<typename _Tp >
_Tpptr (const int *idx)
 
const ucharptr (const int *idx) const
 
template<typename _Tp >
const _Tpptr (const int *idx) const
 
template<int n>
ucharptr (const Vec< int, n > &idx)
 
template<typename _Tp , int n>
_Tpptr (const Vec< int, n > &idx)
 
template<int n>
const ucharptr (const Vec< int, n > &idx) const
 
template<typename _Tp , int n>
const _Tpptr (const Vec< int, n > &idx) const
 
ucharptr (int i0, int i1, int i2)
 
template<typename _Tp >
_Tpptr (int i0, int i1, int i2)
 
const ucharptr (int i0, int i1, int i2) const
 
template<typename _Tp >
const _Tpptr (int i0, int i1, int i2) const
 
ucharptr (int i0=0)
 Returns a pointer to the specified matrix row.
 
template<typename _Tp >
_Tpptr (int i0=0)
 
const ucharptr (int i0=0) const
 
template<typename _Tp >
const _Tpptr (int i0=0) const
 
ucharptr (int row, int col)
 
template<typename _Tp >
_Tpptr (int row, int col)
 
const ucharptr (int row, int col) const
 
template<typename _Tp >
const _Tpptr (int row, int col) const
 
template<typename _Tp >
void push_back (const _Tp &elem)
 Adds elements to the bottom of the matrix.
 
void push_back (const Mat &m)
 
template<typename _Tp >
void push_back (const Mat_< _Tp > &elem)
 
template<typename _Tp >
void push_back (const std::vector< _Tp > &elem)
 
void push_back_ (const void *elem)
 internal function
 
template<typename _Tp >
std::reverse_iterator< MatIterator_< _Tp > > rbegin ()
 Same as begin() but for inverse traversal.
 
template<typename _Tp >
std::reverse_iterator< MatConstIterator_< _Tp > > rbegin () const
 
void release ()
 Decrements the reference counter and deallocates the matrix if needed.
 
template<typename _Tp >
std::reverse_iterator< MatIterator_< _Tp > > rend ()
 Same as end() but for inverse traversal.
 
template<typename _Tp >
std::reverse_iterator< MatConstIterator_< _Tp > > rend () const
 
void reserve (size_t sz)
 Reserves space for the certain number of rows.
 
void reserveBuffer (size_t sz)
 Reserves space for the certain number of bytes.
 
Mat reshape (int cn, const std::vector< int > &newshape) const
 
Mat reshape (int cn, int newndims, const int *newsz) const
 
Mat reshape (int cn, int rows=0) const
 Changes the shape and/or the number of channels of a 2D matrix without copying the data.
 
void resize (size_t sz)
 Changes the number of matrix rows.
 
void resize (size_t sz, const Scalar &s)
 
Mat row (int y) const
 Creates a matrix header for the specified matrix row.
 
Mat rowRange (const Range &r) const
 
Mat rowRange (int startrow, int endrow) const
 Creates a matrix header for the specified row span.
 
MatsetTo (InputArray value, InputArray mask=noArray())
 Sets all or some of the array elements to the specified value.
 
size_t step1 (int i=0) const
 Returns a normalized step.
 
MatExpr t () const
 Transposes a matrix.
 
size_t total () const
 Returns the total number of array elements.
 
size_t total (int startDim, int endDim=INT_MAX) const
 Returns the total number of array elements.
 
int type () const
 Returns the type of a matrix element.
 
void updateContinuityFlag ()
 internal use method: updates the continuity flag
 

Static Public Member Functions

static CV_NODISCARD_STD Mat diag (const Mat &d)
 creates a diagonal matrix
 
static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr eye (int rows, int cols, int type)
 Returns an identity matrix of the specified size and type.
 
static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr eye (Size size, int type)
 
static MatAllocatorgetDefaultAllocator ()
 
static MatAllocatorgetStdAllocator ()
 and the standard allocator
 
static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr ones (int ndims, const int *sz, int type)
 
static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr ones (int rows, int cols, int type)
 Returns an array of all 1's of the specified size and type.
 
static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr ones (Size size, int type)
 
static void setDefaultAllocator (MatAllocator *allocator)
 
static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr zeros (int ndims, const int *sz, int type)
 
static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr zeros (int rows, int cols, int type)
 Returns a zero array of the specified size and type.
 
static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr zeros (Size size, int type)
 

Public Attributes

MatAllocatorallocator
 custom allocator
 
int cols
 
uchardata
 pointer to the data
 
const uchardataend
 
const uchardatalimit
 
const uchardatastart
 helper fields used in locateROI and adjustROI
 
int dims
 the matrix dimensionality, >= 2
 
int flags
 
int rows
 the number of rows and columns or (-1, -1) when the matrix has more than 2 dimensions
 
MatSize size
 
MatStep step
 
UMatDatau
 interaction with UMat
 

Protected Member Functions

template<typename _Tp , typename Functor >
void forEach_impl (const Functor &operation)
 

Detailed Description

n-dimensional dense array class

The class Mat represents an n-dimensional dense numerical single-channel or multi-channel array. It can be used to store real or complex-valued vectors and matrices, grayscale or color images, voxel volumes, vector fields, point clouds, tensors, histograms (though, very high-dimensional histograms may be better stored in a SparseMat ). The data layout of the array M is defined by the array M.step[], so that the address of element \((i_0,...,i_{M.dims-1})\), where \(0\leq i_k<M.size[k]\), is computed as:

\[addr(M_{i_0,...,i_{M.dims-1}}) = M.data + M.step[0]*i_0 + M.step[1]*i_1 + ... + M.step[M.dims-1]*i_{M.dims-1}\]

In case of a 2-dimensional array, the above formula is reduced to:

\[addr(M_{i,j}) = M.data + M.step[0]*i + M.step[1]*j\]

Note that M.step[i] >= M.step[i+1] (in fact, M.step[i] >= M.step[i+1]*M.size[i+1] ). This means that 2-dimensional matrices are stored row-by-row, 3-dimensional matrices are stored plane-by-plane, and so on. M.step[M.dims-1] is minimal and always equal to the element size M.elemSize() .

So, the data layout in Mat is compatible with the majority of dense array types from the standard toolkits and SDKs, such as Numpy (ndarray), Win32 (independent device bitmaps), and others, that is, with any array that uses steps (or strides) to compute the position of a pixel. Due to this compatibility, it is possible to make a Mat header for user-allocated data and process it in-place using OpenCV functions.

There are many different ways to create a Mat object. The most popular options are listed below:

  • Use the create(nrows, ncols, type) method or the similar Mat(nrows, ncols, type[, fillValue]) constructor. A new array of the specified size and type is allocated. type has the same meaning as in the cvCreateMat method. For example, CV_8UC1 means a 8-bit single-channel array, CV_32FC2 means a 2-channel (complex) floating-point array, and so on.
    // make a 7x7 complex matrix filled with 1+3j.
    Mat M(7,7,CV_32FC2,Scalar(1,3));
    // and now turn M to a 100x60 15-channel 8-bit matrix.
    // The old content will be deallocated
    M.create(100,60,CV_8UC(15));
    n-dimensional dense array class
    Definition mat.hpp:829
    Scalar_< double > Scalar
    Definition types.hpp:709
    #define CV_32FC2
    Definition interface.h:119
    #define CV_8UC(n)
    Definition interface.h:92
    As noted in the introduction to this chapter, create() allocates only a new array when the shape or type of the current array are different from the specified ones.
  • Create a multi-dimensional array:
    // create a 100x100x100 8-bit array
    int sz[] = {100, 100, 100};
    Mat bigCube(3, sz, CV_8U, Scalar::all(0));
    static Scalar_< double > all(double v0)
    #define CV_8U
    Definition interface.h:73
    It passes the number of dimensions =1 to the Mat constructor but the created array will be 2-dimensional with the number of columns set to 1. So, Mat::dims is always >= 2 (can also be 0 when the array is empty).
  • Use a copy constructor or assignment operator where there can be an array or expression on the right side (see below). As noted in the introduction, the array assignment is an O(1) operation because it only copies the header and increases the reference counter. The Mat::clone() method can be used to get a full (deep) copy of the array when you need it.
  • Construct a header for a part of another array. It can be a single row, single column, several rows, several columns, rectangular region in the array (called a minor in algebra) or a diagonal. Such operations are also O(1) because the new header references the same data. You can actually modify a part of the array using this feature, for example:
    // add the 5-th row, multiplied by 3 to the 3rd row
    M.row(3) = M.row(3) + M.row(5)*3;
    // now copy the 7-th column to the 1-st column
    // M.col(1) = M.col(7); // this will not work
    Mat M1 = M.col(1);
    M.col(7).copyTo(M1);
    // create a new 320x240 image
    Mat img(Size(320,240),CV_8UC3);
    // select a ROI
    Mat roi(img, Rect(10,10,100,100));
    // fill the ROI with (0,255,0) (which is green in RGB space);
    // the original 320x240 image will be modified
    roi = Scalar(0,255,0);
    Mat col(int x) const
    Creates a matrix header for the specified matrix column.
    void copyTo(OutputArray m) const
    Copies the matrix to another one.
    Rect2i Rect
    Definition types.hpp:496
    Size2i Size
    Definition types.hpp:370
    #define CV_8UC3
    Definition interface.h:90
    Due to the additional datastart and dataend members, it is possible to compute a relative sub-array position in the main container array using locateROI():
    Mat A = Mat::eye(10, 10, CV_32S);
    // extracts A columns, 1 (inclusive) to 3 (exclusive).
    Mat B = A(Range::all(), Range(1, 3));
    // extracts B rows, 5 (inclusive) to 9 (exclusive).
    // that is, C \~ A(Range(5, 9), Range(1, 3))
    Mat C = B(Range(5, 9), Range::all());
    C.locateROI(size, ofs);
    // size will be (width=10,height=10) and the ofs will be (x=1, y=5)
    MatSize size
    Definition mat.hpp:2177
    void locateROI(Size &wholeSize, Point &ofs) const
    Locates the matrix header within a parent matrix.
    static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr eye(int rows, int cols, int type)
    Returns an identity matrix of the specified size and type.
    Template class specifying a continuous subsequence (slice) of a sequence.
    Definition types.hpp:630
    static Range all()
    Template class for specifying the size of an image or rectangle.
    Definition types.hpp:335
    #define CV_32S
    Definition interface.h:77
    As in case of whole matrices, if you need a deep copy, use the clone() method of the extracted sub-matrices.
  • Make a header for user-allocated data. It can be useful to do the following:
    1. Process "foreign" data using OpenCV (for example, when you implement a DirectShow* filter or a processing module for gstreamer, and so on). For example:
      Mat process_video_frame(const unsigned char* pixels,
      int width, int height, int step)
      {
      // wrap input buffer
      Mat img(height, width, CV_8UC3, (unsigned char*)pixels, step);
      Mat result;
      GaussianBlur(img, result, Size(7, 7), 1.5, 1.5);
      return result;
      }
      MatStep step
      Definition mat.hpp:2178
      void GaussianBlur(InputArray src, OutputArray dst, Size ksize, double sigmaX, double sigmaY=0, int borderType=BORDER_DEFAULT, AlgorithmHint hint=cv::ALGO_HINT_DEFAULT)
      Blurs an image using a Gaussian filter.
    2. Quickly initialize small matrices and/or get a super-fast element access.
      double m[3][3] = {{a, b, c}, {d, e, f}, {g, h, i}};
      Mat M = Mat(3, 3, CV_64F, m).inv();
      Mat() CV_NOEXCEPT
      #define CV_64F
      Definition interface.h:79
  • Use MATLAB-style array initializers, zeros(), ones(), eye(), for example:
    // create a double-precision identity matrix and add it to M.
    M += Mat::eye(M.rows, M.cols, CV_64F);
  • Use a comma-separated initializer:
    // create a 3x3 double-precision identity matrix
    Mat M = (Mat_<double>(3,3) << 1, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 1);
    Template matrix class derived from Mat.
    Definition mat.hpp:2247
    With this approach, you first call a constructor of the Mat class with the proper parameters, and then you just put << operator followed by comma-separated values that can be constants, variables, expressions, and so on. Also, note the extra parentheses required to avoid compilation errors.

Once the array is created, it is automatically managed via a reference-counting mechanism. If the array header is built on top of user-allocated data, you should handle the data by yourself. The array data is deallocated when no one points to it. If you want to release the data pointed by a array header before the array destructor is called, use Mat::release().

The next important thing to learn about the array class is element access. This manual already described how to compute an address of each array element. Normally, you are not required to use the formula directly in the code. If you know the array element type (which can be retrieved using the method Mat::type() ), you can access the element \(M_{ij}\) of a 2-dimensional array as:

M.at<double>(i,j) += 1.f;
_Tp & at(int i0=0)
Returns a reference to the specified array element.

assuming that M is a double-precision floating-point array. There are several variants of the method at for a different number of dimensions.

If you need to process a whole row of a 2D array, the most efficient way is to get the pointer to the row first, and then just use the plain C operator [] :

// compute sum of positive matrix elements
// (assuming that M is a double-precision matrix)
double sum=0;
for(int i = 0; i < M.rows; i++)
{
const double* Mi = M.ptr<double>(i);
for(int j = 0; j < M.cols; j++)
sum += std::max(Mi[j], 0.);
}
uchar * ptr(int i0=0)
Returns a pointer to the specified matrix row.
int cols
Definition mat.hpp:2155
int rows
the number of rows and columns or (-1, -1) when the matrix has more than 2 dimensions
Definition mat.hpp:2155
Scalar sum(InputArray src)
Calculates the sum of array elements.

Some operations, like the one above, do not actually depend on the array shape. They just process elements of an array one by one (or elements from multiple arrays that have the same coordinates, for example, array addition). Such operations are called element-wise. It makes sense to check whether all the input/output arrays are continuous, namely, have no gaps at the end of each row. If yes, process them as a long single row:

// compute the sum of positive matrix elements, optimized variant
double sum=0;
int cols = M.cols, rows = M.rows;
if(M.isContinuous())
{
cols *= rows;
rows = 1;
}
for(int i = 0; i < rows; i++)
{
const double* Mi = M.ptr<double>(i);
for(int j = 0; j < cols; j++)
sum += std::max(Mi[j], 0.);
}
bool isContinuous() const
Reports whether the matrix is continuous or not.

In case of the continuous matrix, the outer loop body is executed just once. So, the overhead is smaller, which is especially noticeable in case of small matrices.

Finally, there are STL-style iterators that are smart enough to skip gaps between successive rows:

// compute sum of positive matrix elements, iterator-based variant
double sum=0;
MatConstIterator_<double> it = M.begin<double>(), it_end = M.end<double>();
for(; it != it_end; ++it)
sum += std::max(*it, 0.);
Matrix read-only iterator.
Definition mat.hpp:3166
MatIterator_< _Tp > end()
Returns the matrix iterator and sets it to the after-last matrix element.
MatIterator_< _Tp > begin()
Returns the matrix iterator and sets it to the first matrix element.

The matrix iterators are random-access iterators, so they can be passed to any STL algorithm, including std::sort().

Note
Matrix Expressions and arithmetic see MatExpr
Examples
fld_lines.cpp, modules/shape/samples/shape_example.cpp, samples/cpp/camshiftdemo.cpp, samples/cpp/connected_components.cpp, samples/cpp/contours2.cpp, samples/cpp/convexhull.cpp, samples/cpp/cout_mat.cpp, samples/cpp/create_mask.cpp, samples/cpp/demhist.cpp, samples/cpp/distrans.cpp, samples/cpp/edge.cpp, samples/cpp/facedetect.cpp, samples/cpp/falsecolor.cpp, samples/cpp/ffilldemo.cpp, samples/cpp/fitellipse.cpp, samples/cpp/grabcut.cpp, samples/cpp/image_alignment.cpp, samples/cpp/intersectExample.cpp, samples/cpp/kalman.cpp, samples/cpp/kmeans.cpp, samples/cpp/laplace.cpp, samples/cpp/lkdemo.cpp, samples/cpp/lsd_lines.cpp, samples/cpp/minarea.cpp, samples/cpp/pca.cpp, samples/cpp/peopledetect.cpp, samples/cpp/polar_transforms.cpp, samples/cpp/segment_objects.cpp, samples/cpp/stitching.cpp, samples/cpp/stitching_detailed.cpp, samples/cpp/train_HOG.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/Histograms_Matching/MatchTemplate_Demo.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/ImgProc/Morphology_1.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/ImgProc/Morphology_2.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/ImgProc/Pyramids/Pyramids.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/ImgProc/Smoothing/Smoothing.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/ImgProc/basic_drawing/Drawing_1.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/ImgProc/basic_drawing/Drawing_2.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/ImgTrans/Sobel_Demo.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/ImgTrans/copyMakeBorder_demo.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/ImgTrans/houghcircles.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/ImgTrans/houghlines.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/core/file_input_output/file_input_output.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/core/how_to_scan_images/how_to_scan_images.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/decompose_homography.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/homography_from_camera_displacement.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/pose_from_homography.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/imgcodecs/animations.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/ml/introduction_to_pca/introduction_to_pca.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/photo/non_photorealistic_rendering/npr_demo.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/photo/seamless_cloning/cloning_demo.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/videoio/video-write/video-write.cpp, samples/cpp/videowriter_basic.cpp, samples/cpp/warpPerspective_demo.cpp, samples/cpp/watershed.cpp, samples/dnn/classification.cpp, samples/dnn/colorization.cpp, samples/dnn/object_detection.cpp, samples/dnn/openpose.cpp, samples/dnn/segmentation.cpp, and samples/dnn/text_detection.cpp.

Member Enumeration Documentation

◆ anonymous enum

anonymous enum
Enumerator
MAGIC_VAL 
AUTO_STEP 
CONTINUOUS_FLAG 
SUBMATRIX_FLAG 

◆ anonymous enum

anonymous enum
Enumerator
MAGIC_MASK 
TYPE_MASK 
DEPTH_MASK 

Constructor & Destructor Documentation

◆ Mat() [1/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( )

These are various constructors that form a matrix. As noted in the AutomaticAllocation, often the default constructor is enough, and the proper matrix will be allocated by an OpenCV function. The constructed matrix can further be assigned to another matrix or matrix expression or can be allocated with Mat::create . In the former case, the old content is de-referenced.

◆ Mat() [2/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( int rows,
int cols,
int type )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
rowsNumber of rows in a 2D array.
colsNumber of columns in a 2D array.
typeArray type. Use CV_8UC1, ..., CV_64FC4 to create 1-4 channel matrices, or CV_8UC(n), ..., CV_64FC(n) to create multi-channel (up to CV_CN_MAX channels) matrices.

◆ Mat() [3/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( Size size,
int type )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
size2D array size: Size(cols, rows) . In the Size() constructor, the number of rows and the number of columns go in the reverse order.
typeArray type. Use CV_8UC1, ..., CV_64FC4 to create 1-4 channel matrices, or CV_8UC(n), ..., CV_64FC(n) to create multi-channel (up to CV_CN_MAX channels) matrices.

◆ Mat() [4/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( int rows,
int cols,
int type,
const Scalar & s )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
rowsNumber of rows in a 2D array.
colsNumber of columns in a 2D array.
typeArray type. Use CV_8UC1, ..., CV_64FC4 to create 1-4 channel matrices, or CV_8UC(n), ..., CV_64FC(n) to create multi-channel (up to CV_CN_MAX channels) matrices.
sAn optional value to initialize each matrix element with. To set all the matrix elements to the particular value after the construction, use the assignment operator Mat::operator=(const Scalar& value) .

◆ Mat() [5/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( Size size,
int type,
const Scalar & s )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
size2D array size: Size(cols, rows) . In the Size() constructor, the number of rows and the number of columns go in the reverse order.
typeArray type. Use CV_8UC1, ..., CV_64FC4 to create 1-4 channel matrices, or CV_8UC(n), ..., CV_64FC(n) to create multi-channel (up to CV_CN_MAX channels) matrices.
sAn optional value to initialize each matrix element with. To set all the matrix elements to the particular value after the construction, use the assignment operator Mat::operator=(const Scalar& value) .

◆ Mat() [6/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( int ndims,
const int * sizes,
int type )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
ndimsArray dimensionality.
sizesArray of integers specifying an n-dimensional array shape.
typeArray type. Use CV_8UC1, ..., CV_64FC4 to create 1-4 channel matrices, or CV_8UC(n), ..., CV_64FC(n) to create multi-channel (up to CV_CN_MAX channels) matrices.

◆ Mat() [7/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( const std::vector< int > & sizes,
int type )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
sizesArray of integers specifying an n-dimensional array shape.
typeArray type. Use CV_8UC1, ..., CV_64FC4 to create 1-4 channel matrices, or CV_8UC(n), ..., CV_64FC(n) to create multi-channel (up to CV_CN_MAX channels) matrices.

◆ Mat() [8/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( int ndims,
const int * sizes,
int type,
const Scalar & s )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
ndimsArray dimensionality.
sizesArray of integers specifying an n-dimensional array shape.
typeArray type. Use CV_8UC1, ..., CV_64FC4 to create 1-4 channel matrices, or CV_8UC(n), ..., CV_64FC(n) to create multi-channel (up to CV_CN_MAX channels) matrices.
sAn optional value to initialize each matrix element with. To set all the matrix elements to the particular value after the construction, use the assignment operator Mat::operator=(const Scalar& value) .

◆ Mat() [9/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( const std::vector< int > & sizes,
int type,
const Scalar & s )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
sizesArray of integers specifying an n-dimensional array shape.
typeArray type. Use CV_8UC1, ..., CV_64FC4 to create 1-4 channel matrices, or CV_8UC(n), ..., CV_64FC(n) to create multi-channel (up to CV_CN_MAX channels) matrices.
sAn optional value to initialize each matrix element with. To set all the matrix elements to the particular value after the construction, use the assignment operator Mat::operator=(const Scalar& value) .

◆ Mat() [10/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( const Mat & m)

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
mArray that (as a whole or partly) is assigned to the constructed matrix. No data is copied by these constructors. Instead, the header pointing to m data or its sub-array is constructed and associated with it. The reference counter, if any, is incremented. So, when you modify the matrix formed using such a constructor, you also modify the corresponding elements of m . If you want to have an independent copy of the sub-array, use Mat::clone() .

◆ Mat() [11/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( int rows,
int cols,
int type,
void * data,
size_t step = AUTO_STEP )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
rowsNumber of rows in a 2D array.
colsNumber of columns in a 2D array.
typeArray type. Use CV_8UC1, ..., CV_64FC4 to create 1-4 channel matrices, or CV_8UC(n), ..., CV_64FC(n) to create multi-channel (up to CV_CN_MAX channels) matrices.
dataPointer to the user data. Matrix constructors that take data and step parameters do not allocate matrix data. Instead, they just initialize the matrix header that points to the specified data, which means that no data is copied. This operation is very efficient and can be used to process external data using OpenCV functions. The external data is not automatically deallocated, so you should take care of it.
stepNumber of bytes each matrix row occupies. The value should include the padding bytes at the end of each row, if any. If the parameter is missing (set to AUTO_STEP ), no padding is assumed and the actual step is calculated as cols*elemSize(). See Mat::elemSize.

◆ Mat() [12/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( Size size,
int type,
void * data,
size_t step = AUTO_STEP )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
size2D array size: Size(cols, rows) . In the Size() constructor, the number of rows and the number of columns go in the reverse order.
typeArray type. Use CV_8UC1, ..., CV_64FC4 to create 1-4 channel matrices, or CV_8UC(n), ..., CV_64FC(n) to create multi-channel (up to CV_CN_MAX channels) matrices.
dataPointer to the user data. Matrix constructors that take data and step parameters do not allocate matrix data. Instead, they just initialize the matrix header that points to the specified data, which means that no data is copied. This operation is very efficient and can be used to process external data using OpenCV functions. The external data is not automatically deallocated, so you should take care of it.
stepNumber of bytes each matrix row occupies. The value should include the padding bytes at the end of each row, if any. If the parameter is missing (set to AUTO_STEP ), no padding is assumed and the actual step is calculated as cols*elemSize(). See Mat::elemSize.

◆ Mat() [13/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( int ndims,
const int * sizes,
int type,
void * data,
const size_t * steps = 0 )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
ndimsArray dimensionality.
sizesArray of integers specifying an n-dimensional array shape.
typeArray type. Use CV_8UC1, ..., CV_64FC4 to create 1-4 channel matrices, or CV_8UC(n), ..., CV_64FC(n) to create multi-channel (up to CV_CN_MAX channels) matrices.
dataPointer to the user data. Matrix constructors that take data and step parameters do not allocate matrix data. Instead, they just initialize the matrix header that points to the specified data, which means that no data is copied. This operation is very efficient and can be used to process external data using OpenCV functions. The external data is not automatically deallocated, so you should take care of it.
stepsArray of ndims-1 steps in case of a multi-dimensional array (the last step is always set to the element size). If not specified, the matrix is assumed to be continuous.

◆ Mat() [14/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( const std::vector< int > & sizes,
int type,
void * data,
const size_t * steps = 0 )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
sizesArray of integers specifying an n-dimensional array shape.
typeArray type. Use CV_8UC1, ..., CV_64FC4 to create 1-4 channel matrices, or CV_8UC(n), ..., CV_64FC(n) to create multi-channel (up to CV_CN_MAX channels) matrices.
dataPointer to the user data. Matrix constructors that take data and step parameters do not allocate matrix data. Instead, they just initialize the matrix header that points to the specified data, which means that no data is copied. This operation is very efficient and can be used to process external data using OpenCV functions. The external data is not automatically deallocated, so you should take care of it.
stepsArray of ndims-1 steps in case of a multi-dimensional array (the last step is always set to the element size). If not specified, the matrix is assumed to be continuous.

◆ Mat() [15/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( const Mat & m,
const Range & rowRange,
const Range & colRange = Range::all() )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
mArray that (as a whole or partly) is assigned to the constructed matrix. No data is copied by these constructors. Instead, the header pointing to m data or its sub-array is constructed and associated with it. The reference counter, if any, is incremented. So, when you modify the matrix formed using such a constructor, you also modify the corresponding elements of m . If you want to have an independent copy of the sub-array, use Mat::clone() .
rowRangeRange of the m rows to take. As usual, the range start is inclusive and the range end is exclusive. Use Range::all() to take all the rows.
colRangeRange of the m columns to take. Use Range::all() to take all the columns.

◆ Mat() [16/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( const Mat & m,
const Rect & roi )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
mArray that (as a whole or partly) is assigned to the constructed matrix. No data is copied by these constructors. Instead, the header pointing to m data or its sub-array is constructed and associated with it. The reference counter, if any, is incremented. So, when you modify the matrix formed using such a constructor, you also modify the corresponding elements of m . If you want to have an independent copy of the sub-array, use Mat::clone() .
roiRegion of interest.

◆ Mat() [17/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( const Mat & m,
const Range * ranges )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
mArray that (as a whole or partly) is assigned to the constructed matrix. No data is copied by these constructors. Instead, the header pointing to m data or its sub-array is constructed and associated with it. The reference counter, if any, is incremented. So, when you modify the matrix formed using such a constructor, you also modify the corresponding elements of m . If you want to have an independent copy of the sub-array, use Mat::clone() .
rangesArray of selected ranges of m along each dimensionality.

◆ Mat() [18/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( const Mat & m,
const std::vector< Range > & ranges )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
mArray that (as a whole or partly) is assigned to the constructed matrix. No data is copied by these constructors. Instead, the header pointing to m data or its sub-array is constructed and associated with it. The reference counter, if any, is incremented. So, when you modify the matrix formed using such a constructor, you also modify the corresponding elements of m . If you want to have an independent copy of the sub-array, use Mat::clone() .
rangesArray of selected ranges of m along each dimensionality.

◆ Mat() [19/29]

template<typename _Tp >
cv::Mat::Mat ( const std::vector< _Tp > & vec,
bool copyData = false )
explicit

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
vecSTL vector whose elements form the matrix. The matrix has a single column and the number of rows equal to the number of vector elements. Type of the matrix matches the type of vector elements. The constructor can handle arbitrary types, for which there is a properly declared DataType . This means that the vector elements must be primitive numbers or uni-type numerical tuples of numbers. Mixed-type structures are not supported. The corresponding constructor is explicit. Since STL vectors are not automatically converted to Mat instances, you should write Mat(vec) explicitly. Unless you copy the data into the matrix ( copyData=true ), no new elements will be added to the vector because it can potentially yield vector data reallocation, and, thus, the matrix data pointer will be invalid.
copyDataFlag to specify whether the underlying data of the STL vector should be copied to (true) or shared with (false) the newly constructed matrix. When the data is copied, the allocated buffer is managed using Mat reference counting mechanism. While the data is shared, the reference counter is NULL, and you should not deallocate the data until the matrix is destructed.

◆ Mat() [20/29]

template<typename _Tp , typename = typename std::enable_if<std::is_arithmetic<_Tp>::value>::type>
cv::Mat::Mat ( const std::initializer_list< _Tp > list)
explicit

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ Mat() [21/29]

template<typename _Tp >
cv::Mat::Mat ( const std::initializer_list< int > sizes,
const std::initializer_list< _Tp > list )
explicit

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ Mat() [22/29]

template<typename _Tp , size_t _Nm>
cv::Mat::Mat ( const std::array< _Tp, _Nm > & arr,
bool copyData = false )
explicit

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ Mat() [23/29]

template<typename _Tp , int n>
cv::Mat::Mat ( const Vec< _Tp, n > & vec,
bool copyData = true )
explicit

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ Mat() [24/29]

template<typename _Tp , int m, int n>
cv::Mat::Mat ( const Matx< _Tp, m, n > & mtx,
bool copyData = true )
explicit

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ Mat() [25/29]

template<typename _Tp >
cv::Mat::Mat ( const Point_< _Tp > & pt,
bool copyData = true )
explicit

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ Mat() [26/29]

template<typename _Tp >
cv::Mat::Mat ( const Point3_< _Tp > & pt,
bool copyData = true )
explicit

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ Mat() [27/29]

template<typename _Tp >
cv::Mat::Mat ( const MatCommaInitializer_< _Tp > & commaInitializer)
explicit

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ Mat() [28/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( const cuda::GpuMat & m)
explicit

download data from GpuMat

◆ ~Mat()

cv::Mat::~Mat ( )

destructor - calls release()

◆ Mat() [29/29]

cv::Mat::Mat ( Mat && m)

Member Function Documentation

◆ addref()

void cv::Mat::addref ( )

Increments the reference counter.

The method increments the reference counter associated with the matrix data. If the matrix header points to an external data set (see Mat::Mat ), the reference counter is NULL, and the method has no effect in this case. Normally, to avoid memory leaks, the method should not be called explicitly. It is called implicitly by the matrix assignment operator. The reference counter increment is an atomic operation on the platforms that support it. Thus, it is safe to operate on the same matrices asynchronously in different threads.

◆ adjustROI()

Mat & cv::Mat::adjustROI ( int dtop,
int dbottom,
int dleft,
int dright )

Adjusts a submatrix size and position within the parent matrix.

The method is complimentary to Mat::locateROI . The typical use of these functions is to determine the submatrix position within the parent matrix and then shift the position somehow. Typically, it can be required for filtering operations when pixels outside of the ROI should be taken into account. When all the method parameters are positive, the ROI needs to grow in all directions by the specified amount, for example:

A.adjustROI(2, 2, 2, 2);

In this example, the matrix size is increased by 4 elements in each direction. The matrix is shifted by 2 elements to the left and 2 elements up, which brings in all the necessary pixels for the filtering with the 5x5 kernel.

adjustROI forces the adjusted ROI to be inside of the parent matrix that is boundaries of the adjusted ROI are constrained by boundaries of the parent matrix. For example, if the submatrix A is located in the first row of a parent matrix and you called A.adjustROI(2, 2, 2, 2) then A will not be increased in the upward direction.

The function is used internally by the OpenCV filtering functions, like filter2D , morphological operations, and so on.

Parameters
dtopShift of the top submatrix boundary upwards.
dbottomShift of the bottom submatrix boundary downwards.
dleftShift of the left submatrix boundary to the left.
drightShift of the right submatrix boundary to the right.
See also
copyMakeBorder

◆ assignTo()

void cv::Mat::assignTo ( Mat & m,
int type = -1 ) const

Provides a functional form of convertTo.

This is an internally used method called by the MatrixExpressions engine.

Parameters
mDestination array.
typeDesired destination array depth (or -1 if it should be the same as the source type).

◆ at() [1/12]

template<typename _Tp >
_Tp & cv::Mat::at ( const int * idx)

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
idxArray of Mat::dims indices.

◆ at() [2/12]

template<typename _Tp >
const _Tp & cv::Mat::at ( const int * idx) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
idxArray of Mat::dims indices.

◆ at() [3/12]

template<typename _Tp , int n>
_Tp & cv::Mat::at ( const Vec< int, n > & idx)

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ at() [4/12]

template<typename _Tp , int n>
const _Tp & cv::Mat::at ( const Vec< int, n > & idx) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ at() [5/12]

template<typename _Tp >
_Tp & cv::Mat::at ( int i0,
int i1,
int i2 )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
i0Index along the dimension 0
i1Index along the dimension 1
i2Index along the dimension 2

◆ at() [6/12]

template<typename _Tp >
const _Tp & cv::Mat::at ( int i0,
int i1,
int i2 ) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
i0Index along the dimension 0
i1Index along the dimension 1
i2Index along the dimension 2

◆ at() [7/12]

template<typename _Tp >
_Tp & cv::Mat::at ( int i0 = 0)

Returns a reference to the specified array element.

The template methods return a reference to the specified array element. For the sake of higher performance, the index range checks are only performed in the Debug configuration.

Note that the variants with a single index (i) can be used to access elements of single-row or single-column 2-dimensional arrays. That is, if, for example, A is a 1 x N floating-point matrix and B is an M x 1 integer matrix, you can simply write A.at<float>(k+4) and B.at<int>(2*i+1) instead of A.at<float>(0,k+4) and B.at<int>(2*i+1,0), respectively.

The example below initializes a Hilbert matrix:

Mat H(100, 100, CV_64F);
for(int i = 0; i < H.rows; i++)
for(int j = 0; j < H.cols; j++)
H.at<double>(i,j)=1./(i+j+1);

Keep in mind that the size identifier used in the at operator cannot be chosen at random. It depends on the image from which you are trying to retrieve the data. The table below gives a better insight in this:

  • If matrix is of type CV_8U then use Mat.at<uchar>(y,x).
  • If matrix is of type CV_8S then use Mat.at<schar>(y,x).
  • If matrix is of type CV_16U then use Mat.at<ushort>(y,x).
  • If matrix is of type CV_16S then use Mat.at<short>(y,x).
  • If matrix is of type CV_32S then use Mat.at<int>(y,x).
  • If matrix is of type CV_32F then use Mat.at<float>(y,x).
  • If matrix is of type CV_64F then use Mat.at<double>(y,x).
Parameters
i0Index along the dimension 0
Examples
samples/cpp/camshiftdemo.cpp, samples/cpp/connected_components.cpp, samples/cpp/cout_mat.cpp, samples/cpp/demhist.cpp, samples/cpp/fitellipse.cpp, samples/cpp/image_alignment.cpp, samples/cpp/kalman.cpp, samples/cpp/kmeans.cpp, samples/cpp/train_HOG.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/core/how_to_scan_images/how_to_scan_images.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/decompose_homography.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/homography_from_camera_displacement.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/pose_from_homography.cpp, and samples/cpp/tutorial_code/ml/introduction_to_pca/introduction_to_pca.cpp.

◆ at() [8/12]

template<typename _Tp >
const _Tp & cv::Mat::at ( int i0 = 0) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
i0Index along the dimension 0

◆ at() [9/12]

template<typename _Tp >
_Tp & cv::Mat::at ( int row,
int col )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
rowIndex along the dimension 0
colIndex along the dimension 1

◆ at() [10/12]

template<typename _Tp >
const _Tp & cv::Mat::at ( int row,
int col ) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
rowIndex along the dimension 0
colIndex along the dimension 1

◆ at() [11/12]

template<typename _Tp >
_Tp & cv::Mat::at ( Point pt)

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts. special versions for 2D arrays (especially convenient for referencing image pixels)

Parameters
ptElement position specified as Point(j,i) .

◆ at() [12/12]

template<typename _Tp >
const _Tp & cv::Mat::at ( Point pt) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts. special versions for 2D arrays (especially convenient for referencing image pixels)

Parameters
ptElement position specified as Point(j,i) .

◆ begin() [1/2]

template<typename _Tp >
MatIterator_< _Tp > cv::Mat::begin ( )

Returns the matrix iterator and sets it to the first matrix element.

The methods return the matrix read-only or read-write iterators. The use of matrix iterators is very similar to the use of bi-directional STL iterators. In the example below, the alpha blending function is rewritten using the matrix iterators:

template<typename T>
void alphaBlendRGBA(const Mat& src1, const Mat& src2, Mat& dst)
{
typedef Vec<T, 4> VT;
const float alpha_scale = (float)std::numeric_limits<T>::max(),
inv_scale = 1.f/alpha_scale;
CV_Assert( src1.type() == src2.type() &&
src1.type() == traits::Type<VT>::value &&
src1.size() == src2.size());
Size size = src1.size();
dst.create(size, src1.type());
MatConstIterator_<VT> it1 = src1.begin<VT>(), it1_end = src1.end<VT>();
MatConstIterator_<VT> it2 = src2.begin<VT>();
MatIterator_<VT> dst_it = dst.begin<VT>();
for( ; it1 != it1_end; ++it1, ++it2, ++dst_it )
{
VT pix1 = *it1, pix2 = *it2;
float alpha = pix1[3]*inv_scale, beta = pix2[3]*inv_scale;
*dst_it = VT(saturate_cast<T>(pix1[0]*alpha + pix2[0]*beta),
saturate_cast<T>(pix1[1]*alpha + pix2[1]*beta),
saturate_cast<T>(pix1[2]*alpha + pix2[2]*beta),
saturate_cast<T>((1 - (1-alpha)*(1-beta))*alpha_scale));
}
}
Matrix read-write iterator.
Definition mat.hpp:3219
void create(int rows, int cols, int type)
Allocates new array data if needed.
int type() const
Returns the type of a matrix element.
Template class for short numerical vectors, a partial case of Matx.
Definition matx.hpp:369
static _Tp saturate_cast(uchar v)
Template function for accurate conversion from one primitive type to another.
Definition saturate.hpp:81
#define CV_Assert(expr)
Checks a condition at runtime and throws exception if it fails.
Definition base.hpp:359
Examples
samples/cpp/tutorial_code/core/how_to_scan_images/how_to_scan_images.cpp, and samples/dnn/classification.cpp.

◆ begin() [2/2]

template<typename _Tp >
MatConstIterator_< _Tp > cv::Mat::begin ( ) const

◆ channels()

int cv::Mat::channels ( ) const

Returns the number of matrix channels.

The method returns the number of matrix channels.

Examples
samples/cpp/pca.cpp, and samples/cpp/tutorial_code/core/how_to_scan_images/how_to_scan_images.cpp.

◆ checkVector()

int cv::Mat::checkVector ( int elemChannels,
int depth = -1,
bool requireContinuous = true ) const
Parameters
elemChannelsNumber of channels or number of columns the matrix should have. For a 2-D matrix, when the matrix has only 1 column, then it should have elemChannels channels; When the matrix has only 1 channel, then it should have elemChannels columns. For a 3-D matrix, it should have only one channel. Furthermore, if the number of planes is not one, then the number of rows within every plane has to be 1; if the number of rows within every plane is not 1, then the number of planes has to be 1.
depthThe depth the matrix should have. Set it to -1 when any depth is fine.
requireContinuousSet it to true to require the matrix to be continuous
Returns
-1 if the requirement is not satisfied. Otherwise, it returns the number of elements in the matrix. Note that an element may have multiple channels.

The following code demonstrates its usage for a 2-d matrix:

cv::Mat mat(20, 1, CV_32FC2);
int n = mat.checkVector(2);
CV_Assert(n == 20); // mat has 20 elements
mat.create(20, 2, CV_32FC1);
n = mat.checkVector(1);
CV_Assert(n == -1); // mat is neither a column nor a row vector
n = mat.checkVector(2);
CV_Assert(n == 20); // the 2 columns are considered as 1 element

The following code demonstrates its usage for a 3-d matrix:

int dims[] = {1, 3, 5}; // 1 plane, every plane has 3 rows and 5 columns
mat.create(3, dims, CV_32FC1); // for 3-d mat, it MUST have only 1 channel
n = mat.checkVector(5); // the 5 columns are considered as 1 element
CV_Assert(n == 3);
int dims2[] = {3, 1, 5}; // 3 planes, every plane has 1 row and 5 columns
mat.create(3, dims2, CV_32FC1);
n = mat.checkVector(5); // the 5 columns are considered as 1 element
CV_Assert(n == 3);

◆ clone()

◆ col()

Mat cv::Mat::col ( int x) const

Creates a matrix header for the specified matrix column.

The method makes a new header for the specified matrix column and returns it. This is an O(1) operation, regardless of the matrix size. The underlying data of the new matrix is shared with the original matrix. See also the Mat::row description.

Parameters
xA 0-based column index.
Examples
samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/pose_from_homography.cpp.

◆ colRange() [1/2]

Mat cv::Mat::colRange ( const Range & r) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
rRange structure containing both the start and the end indices.

◆ colRange() [2/2]

Mat cv::Mat::colRange ( int startcol,
int endcol ) const

Creates a matrix header for the specified column span.

The method makes a new header for the specified column span of the matrix. Similarly to Mat::row and Mat::col , this is an O(1) operation.

Parameters
startcolAn inclusive 0-based start index of the column span.
endcolAn exclusive 0-based ending index of the column span.

◆ convertTo()

void cv::Mat::convertTo ( OutputArray m,
int rtype,
double alpha = 1,
double beta = 0 ) const

Converts an array to another data type with optional scaling.

The method converts source pixel values to the target data type. saturate_cast<> is applied at the end to avoid possible overflows:

\[m(x,y) = saturate \_ cast<rType>( \alpha (*this)(x,y) + \beta )\]

Parameters
moutput matrix; if it does not have a proper size or type before the operation, it is reallocated.
rtypedesired output matrix type or, rather, the depth since the number of channels are the same as the input has; if rtype is negative, the output matrix will have the same type as the input.
alphaoptional scale factor.
betaoptional delta added to the scaled values.
Examples
samples/cpp/demhist.cpp, samples/cpp/distrans.cpp, samples/cpp/fitellipse.cpp, samples/cpp/pca.cpp, samples/cpp/stitching_detailed.cpp, and samples/dnn/colorization.cpp.

◆ copySize()

void cv::Mat::copySize ( const Mat & m)

internal use function; properly re-allocates _size, _step arrays

◆ copyTo() [1/2]

void cv::Mat::copyTo ( OutputArray m) const

Copies the matrix to another one.

The method copies the matrix data to another matrix. Before copying the data, the method invokes :

m.create(this->size(), this->type());

so that the destination matrix is reallocated if needed. While m.copyTo(m); works flawlessly, the function does not handle the case of a partial overlap between the source and the destination matrices.

When the operation mask is specified, if the Mat::create call shown above reallocates the matrix, the newly allocated matrix is initialized with all zeros before copying the data.

Parameters
mDestination matrix. If it does not have a proper size or type before the operation, it is reallocated.
Examples
samples/cpp/edge.cpp, samples/cpp/grabcut.cpp, samples/cpp/image_alignment.cpp, samples/cpp/lkdemo.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/Histograms_Matching/MatchTemplate_Demo.cpp, samples/cpp/watershed.cpp, and samples/tapi/hog.cpp.

◆ copyTo() [2/2]

void cv::Mat::copyTo ( OutputArray m,
InputArray mask ) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
mDestination matrix. If it does not have a proper size or type before the operation, it is reallocated.
maskOperation mask of the same size as *this. Its non-zero elements indicate which matrix elements need to be copied. The mask has to be of type CV_8U and can have 1 or multiple channels.

◆ create() [1/4]

void cv::Mat::create ( const std::vector< int > & sizes,
int type )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
sizesArray of integers specifying a new array shape.
typeNew matrix type.

◆ create() [2/4]

void cv::Mat::create ( int ndims,
const int * sizes,
int type )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
ndimsNew array dimensionality.
sizesArray of integers specifying a new array shape.
typeNew matrix type.

◆ create() [3/4]

void cv::Mat::create ( int rows,
int cols,
int type )

Allocates new array data if needed.

This is one of the key Mat methods. Most new-style OpenCV functions and methods that produce arrays call this method for each output array. The method uses the following algorithm:

  1. If the current array shape and the type match the new ones, return immediately. Otherwise, de-reference the previous data by calling Mat::release.
  2. Initialize the new header.
  3. Allocate the new data of total()*elemSize() bytes.
  4. Allocate the new, associated with the data, reference counter and set it to 1.

Such a scheme makes the memory management robust and efficient at the same time and helps avoid extra typing for you. This means that usually there is no need to explicitly allocate output arrays. That is, instead of writing:

Mat color;
...
Mat gray(color.rows, color.cols, color.depth());
cvtColor(color, gray, COLOR_BGR2GRAY);
int depth() const
Returns the depth of a matrix element.
void cvtColor(InputArray src, OutputArray dst, int code, int dstCn=0, AlgorithmHint hint=cv::ALGO_HINT_DEFAULT)
Converts an image from one color space to another.
@ COLOR_BGR2GRAY
convert between RGB/BGR and grayscale, color conversions
Definition imgproc.hpp:555

you can simply write:

Mat color;
...
Mat gray;
cvtColor(color, gray, COLOR_BGR2GRAY);

because cvtColor, as well as the most of OpenCV functions, calls Mat::create() for the output array internally.

Parameters
rowsNew number of rows.
colsNew number of columns.
typeNew matrix type.
Examples
samples/cpp/camshiftdemo.cpp, samples/cpp/edge.cpp, samples/cpp/grabcut.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/Histograms_Matching/MatchTemplate_Demo.cpp, and samples/dnn/segmentation.cpp.

◆ create() [4/4]

void cv::Mat::create ( Size size,
int type )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
sizeAlternative new matrix size specification: Size(cols, rows)
typeNew matrix type.

◆ cross()

Mat cv::Mat::cross ( InputArray m) const

Computes a cross-product of two 3-element vectors.

The method computes a cross-product of two 3-element vectors. The vectors must be 3-element floating-point vectors of the same shape and size. The result is another 3-element vector of the same shape and type as operands.

Parameters
mAnother cross-product operand.
Examples
samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/pose_from_homography.cpp.

◆ deallocate()

void cv::Mat::deallocate ( )

internal use function, consider to use 'release' method instead; deallocates the matrix data

◆ depth()

int cv::Mat::depth ( ) const

Returns the depth of a matrix element.

The method returns the identifier of the matrix element depth (the type of each individual channel). For example, for a 16-bit signed element array, the method returns CV_16S . A complete list of matrix types contains the following values:

  • CV_8U - 8-bit unsigned integers ( 0..255 )
  • CV_8S - 8-bit signed integers ( -128..127 )
  • CV_16U - 16-bit unsigned integers ( 0..65535 )
  • CV_16S - 16-bit signed integers ( -32768..32767 )
  • CV_32S - 32-bit signed integers ( -2147483648..2147483647 )
  • CV_32F - 32-bit floating-point numbers ( -FLT_MAX..FLT_MAX, INF, NAN )
  • CV_64F - 64-bit floating-point numbers ( -DBL_MAX..DBL_MAX, INF, NAN )
Examples
samples/cpp/camshiftdemo.cpp, and samples/cpp/tutorial_code/core/how_to_scan_images/how_to_scan_images.cpp.

◆ diag() [1/2]

static CV_NODISCARD_STD Mat cv::Mat::diag ( const Mat & d)
static

creates a diagonal matrix

The method creates a square diagonal matrix from specified main diagonal.

Parameters
dOne-dimensional matrix that represents the main diagonal.

◆ diag() [2/2]

Mat cv::Mat::diag ( int d = 0) const

Extracts a diagonal from a matrix.

The method makes a new header for the specified matrix diagonal. The new matrix is represented as a single-column matrix. Similarly to Mat::row and Mat::col, this is an O(1) operation.

Parameters
dindex of the diagonal, with the following values:
  • d=0 is the main diagonal.
  • d<0 is a diagonal from the lower half. For example, d=-1 means the diagonal is set immediately below the main one.
  • d>0 is a diagonal from the upper half. For example, d=1 means the diagonal is set immediately above the main one. For example:
    Mat m = (Mat_<int>(3,3) <<
    1,2,3,
    4,5,6,
    7,8,9);
    Mat d0 = m.diag(0);
    Mat d1 = m.diag(1);
    Mat d_1 = m.diag(-1);
    Mat diag(int d=0) const
    Extracts a diagonal from a matrix.
    The resulting matrices are
    d0 =
    [1;
    5;
    9]
    d1 =
    [2;
    6]
    d_1 =
    [4;
    8]

◆ dot()

double cv::Mat::dot ( InputArray m) const

Computes a dot-product of two vectors.

The method computes a dot-product of two matrices. If the matrices are not single-column or single-row vectors, the top-to-bottom left-to-right scan ordering is used to treat them as 1D vectors. The vectors must have the same size and type. If the matrices have more than one channel, the dot products from all the channels are summed together.

Parameters
manother dot-product operand.
Examples
samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/decompose_homography.cpp, and samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/homography_from_camera_displacement.cpp.

◆ elemSize()

size_t cv::Mat::elemSize ( ) const

Returns the matrix element size in bytes.

The method returns the matrix element size in bytes. For example, if the matrix type is CV_16SC3 , the method returns 3*sizeof(short) or 6.

◆ elemSize1()

size_t cv::Mat::elemSize1 ( ) const

Returns the size of each matrix element channel in bytes.

The method returns the matrix element channel size in bytes, that is, it ignores the number of channels. For example, if the matrix type is CV_16SC3 , the method returns sizeof(short) or 2.

◆ empty()

bool cv::Mat::empty ( ) const

◆ end() [1/2]

template<typename _Tp >
MatIterator_< _Tp > cv::Mat::end ( )

Returns the matrix iterator and sets it to the after-last matrix element.

The methods return the matrix read-only or read-write iterators, set to the point following the last matrix element.

Examples
samples/cpp/tutorial_code/core/how_to_scan_images/how_to_scan_images.cpp, and samples/dnn/classification.cpp.

◆ end() [2/2]

template<typename _Tp >
MatConstIterator_< _Tp > cv::Mat::end ( ) const

◆ eye() [1/2]

static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr cv::Mat::eye ( int rows,
int cols,
int type )
static

Returns an identity matrix of the specified size and type.

The method returns a Matlab-style identity matrix initializer, similarly to Mat::zeros. Similarly to Mat::ones, you can use a scale operation to create a scaled identity matrix efficiently:

// make a 4x4 diagonal matrix with 0.1's on the diagonal.
Mat A = Mat::eye(4, 4, CV_32F)*0.1;
#define CV_32F
Definition interface.h:78
Note
In case of multi-channels type, identity matrix will be initialized only for the first channel, the others will be set to 0's
Parameters
rowsNumber of rows.
colsNumber of columns.
typeCreated matrix type.

◆ eye() [2/2]

static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr cv::Mat::eye ( Size size,
int type )
static

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
sizeAlternative matrix size specification as Size(cols, rows) .
typeCreated matrix type.

◆ forEach() [1/2]

template<typename _Tp , typename Functor >
void cv::Mat::forEach ( const Functor & operation)

Runs the given functor over all matrix elements in parallel.

The operation passed as argument has to be a function pointer, a function object or a lambda(C++11).

Example 1. All of the operations below put 0xFF the first channel of all matrix elements:

Mat image(1920, 1080, CV_8UC3);
typedef cv::Point3_<uint8_t> Pixel;
// first. raw pointer access.
for (int r = 0; r < image.rows; ++r) {
Pixel* ptr = image.ptr<Pixel>(r, 0);
const Pixel* ptr_end = ptr + image.cols;
for (; ptr != ptr_end; ++ptr) {
ptr->x = 255;
}
}
// Using MatIterator. (Simple but there are a Iterator's overhead)
for (Pixel &p : cv::Mat_<Pixel>(image)) {
p.x = 255;
}
// Parallel execution with function object.
struct Operator {
void operator ()(Pixel &pixel, const int * position) {
pixel.x = 255;
}
};
image.forEach<Pixel>(Operator());
// Parallel execution using C++11 lambda.
image.forEach<Pixel>([](Pixel &p, const int * position) -> void {
p.x = 255;
});
Template class for 3D points specified by its coordinates x, y and z.
Definition types.hpp:255
_Tp x
x coordinate of the 3D point
Definition types.hpp:284

Example 2. Using the pixel's position:

// Creating 3D matrix (255 x 255 x 255) typed uint8_t
// and initialize all elements by the value which equals elements position.
// i.e. pixels (x,y,z) = (1,2,3) is (b,g,r) = (1,2,3).
int sizes[] = { 255, 255, 255 };
typedef cv::Point3_<uint8_t> Pixel;
Mat_<Pixel> image = Mat::zeros(3, sizes, CV_8UC3);
image.forEach<Pixel>([](Pixel& pixel, const int position[]) -> void {
pixel.x = position[0];
pixel.y = position[1];
pixel.z = position[2];
});
void forEach(const Functor &operation)
template methods for operation over all matrix elements.
static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr zeros(int rows, int cols, int type)
Returns a zero array of the specified size and type.

◆ forEach() [2/2]

template<typename _Tp , typename Functor >
void cv::Mat::forEach ( const Functor & operation) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ getDefaultAllocator()

static MatAllocator * cv::Mat::getDefaultAllocator ( )
static

◆ getStdAllocator()

static MatAllocator * cv::Mat::getStdAllocator ( )
static

and the standard allocator

◆ getUMat()

UMat cv::Mat::getUMat ( AccessFlag accessFlags,
UMatUsageFlags usageFlags = USAGE_DEFAULT ) const

retrieve UMat from Mat

◆ inv()

MatExpr cv::Mat::inv ( int method = DECOMP_LU) const

Inverses a matrix.

The method performs a matrix inversion by means of matrix expressions. This means that a temporary matrix inversion object is returned by the method and can be used further as a part of more complex matrix expressions or can be assigned to a matrix.

Parameters
methodMatrix inversion method. One of cv::DecompTypes
Examples
samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/decompose_homography.cpp, and samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/homography_from_camera_displacement.cpp.

◆ isContinuous()

bool cv::Mat::isContinuous ( ) const

Reports whether the matrix is continuous or not.

The method returns true if the matrix elements are stored continuously without gaps at the end of each row. Otherwise, it returns false. Obviously, 1x1 or 1xN matrices are always continuous. Matrices created with Mat::create are always continuous. But if you extract a part of the matrix using Mat::col, Mat::diag, and so on, or constructed a matrix header for externally allocated data, such matrices may no longer have this property.

The continuity flag is stored as a bit in the Mat::flags field and is computed automatically when you construct a matrix header. Thus, the continuity check is a very fast operation, though theoretically it could be done as follows:

// alternative implementation of Mat::isContinuous()
bool myCheckMatContinuity(const Mat& m)
{
//return (m.flags & Mat::CONTINUOUS_FLAG) != 0;
return m.rows == 1 || m.step == m.cols*m.elemSize();
}
size_t elemSize() const
Returns the matrix element size in bytes.

The method is used in quite a few of OpenCV functions. The point is that element-wise operations (such as arithmetic and logical operations, math functions, alpha blending, color space transformations, and others) do not depend on the image geometry. Thus, if all the input and output arrays are continuous, the functions can process them as very long single-row vectors. The example below illustrates how an alpha-blending function can be implemented:

template<typename T>
void alphaBlendRGBA(const Mat& src1, const Mat& src2, Mat& dst)
{
const float alpha_scale = (float)std::numeric_limits<T>::max(),
inv_scale = 1.f/alpha_scale;
CV_Assert( src1.type() == src2.type() &&
src1.type() == CV_MAKETYPE(traits::Depth<T>::value, 4) &&
src1.size() == src2.size());
Size size = src1.size();
dst.create(size, src1.type());
// here is the idiom: check the arrays for continuity and,
// if this is the case,
// treat the arrays as 1D vectors
if( src1.isContinuous() && src2.isContinuous() && dst.isContinuous() )
{
size.width *= size.height;
size.height = 1;
}
size.width *= 4;
for( int i = 0; i < size.height; i++ )
{
// when the arrays are continuous,
// the outer loop is executed only once
const T* ptr1 = src1.ptr<T>(i);
const T* ptr2 = src2.ptr<T>(i);
T* dptr = dst.ptr<T>(i);
for( int j = 0; j < size.width; j += 4 )
{
float alpha = ptr1[j+3]*inv_scale, beta = ptr2[j+3]*inv_scale;
dptr[j] = saturate_cast<T>(ptr1[j]*alpha + ptr2[j]*beta);
dptr[j+1] = saturate_cast<T>(ptr1[j+1]*alpha + ptr2[j+1]*beta);
dptr[j+2] = saturate_cast<T>(ptr1[j+2]*alpha + ptr2[j+2]*beta);
dptr[j+3] = saturate_cast<T>((1 - (1-alpha)*(1-beta))*alpha_scale);
}
}
}
#define CV_MAKETYPE(depth, cn)
Definition interface.h:85

This approach, while being very simple, can boost the performance of a simple element-operation by 10-20 percents, especially if the image is rather small and the operation is quite simple.

Another OpenCV idiom in this function, a call of Mat::create for the destination array, that allocates the destination array unless it already has the proper size and type. And while the newly allocated arrays are always continuous, you still need to check the destination array because Mat::create does not always allocate a new matrix.

Examples
samples/cpp/tutorial_code/core/how_to_scan_images/how_to_scan_images.cpp.

◆ isSubmatrix()

bool cv::Mat::isSubmatrix ( ) const

returns true if the matrix is a submatrix of another matrix

◆ locateROI()

void cv::Mat::locateROI ( Size & wholeSize,
Point & ofs ) const

Locates the matrix header within a parent matrix.

After you extracted a submatrix from a matrix using Mat::row, Mat::col, Mat::rowRange, Mat::colRange, and others, the resultant submatrix points just to the part of the original big matrix. However, each submatrix contains information (represented by datastart and dataend fields) that helps reconstruct the original matrix size and the position of the extracted submatrix within the original matrix. The method locateROI does exactly that.

Parameters
wholeSizeOutput parameter that contains the size of the whole matrix containing this as a part.
ofsOutput parameter that contains an offset of this inside the whole matrix.

◆ mul()

MatExpr cv::Mat::mul ( InputArray m,
double scale = 1 ) const

Performs an element-wise multiplication or division of the two matrices.

The method returns a temporary object encoding per-element array multiplication, with optional scale. Note that this is not a matrix multiplication that corresponds to a simpler "\*" operator.

Example:

Mat C = A.mul(5/B); // equivalent to divide(A, B, C, 5)
MatExpr mul(InputArray m, double scale=1) const
Performs an element-wise multiplication or division of the two matrices.
Parameters
mAnother array of the same type and the same size as *this, or a matrix expression.
scaleOptional scale factor.

◆ ones() [1/3]

static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr cv::Mat::ones ( int ndims,
const int * sz,
int type )
static

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
ndimsArray dimensionality.
szArray of integers specifying the array shape.
typeCreated matrix type.

◆ ones() [2/3]

static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr cv::Mat::ones ( int rows,
int cols,
int type )
static

Returns an array of all 1's of the specified size and type.

The method returns a Matlab-style 1's array initializer, similarly to Mat::zeros. Note that using this method you can initialize an array with an arbitrary value, using the following Matlab idiom:

Mat A = Mat::ones(100, 100, CV_8U)*3; // make 100x100 matrix filled with 3.
static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr ones(int rows, int cols, int type)
Returns an array of all 1's of the specified size and type.

The above operation does not form a 100x100 matrix of 1's and then multiply it by 3. Instead, it just remembers the scale factor (3 in this case) and use it when actually invoking the matrix initializer.

Note
In case of multi-channels type, only the first channel will be initialized with 1's, the others will be set to 0's.
Parameters
rowsNumber of rows.
colsNumber of columns.
typeCreated matrix type.

◆ ones() [3/3]

static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr cv::Mat::ones ( Size size,
int type )
static

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
sizeAlternative to the matrix size specification Size(cols, rows) .
typeCreated matrix type.

◆ operator Matx< _Tp, m, n >()

template<typename _Tp , int m, int n>
cv::Mat::operator Matx< _Tp, m, n > ( ) const

◆ operator std::array< _Tp, _Nm >()

template<typename _Tp , std::size_t _Nm>
cv::Mat::operator std::array< _Tp, _Nm > ( ) const

◆ operator std::vector< _Tp >()

template<typename _Tp >
cv::Mat::operator std::vector< _Tp > ( ) const

◆ operator Vec< _Tp, n >()

template<typename _Tp , int n>
cv::Mat::operator Vec< _Tp, n > ( ) const

◆ operator()() [1/4]

Mat cv::Mat::operator() ( const Range * ranges) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
rangesArray of selected ranges along each array dimension.

◆ operator()() [2/4]

Mat cv::Mat::operator() ( const Rect & roi) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
roiExtracted submatrix specified as a rectangle.

◆ operator()() [3/4]

Mat cv::Mat::operator() ( const std::vector< Range > & ranges) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
rangesArray of selected ranges along each array dimension.

◆ operator()() [4/4]

Mat cv::Mat::operator() ( Range rowRange,
Range colRange ) const

Extracts a rectangular submatrix.

The operators make a new header for the specified sub-array of *this . They are the most generalized forms of Mat::row, Mat::col, Mat::rowRange, and Mat::colRange . For example, A(Range(0, 10), Range::all()) is equivalent to A.rowRange(0, 10). Similarly to all of the above, the operators are O(1) operations, that is, no matrix data is copied.

Parameters
rowRangeStart and end row of the extracted submatrix. The upper boundary is not included. To select all the rows, use Range::all().
colRangeStart and end column of the extracted submatrix. The upper boundary is not included. To select all the columns, use Range::all().

◆ operator=() [1/4]

Mat & cv::Mat::operator= ( const Mat & m)

assignment operators

These are available assignment operators. Since they all are very different, make sure to read the operator parameters description.

Parameters
mAssigned, right-hand-side matrix. Matrix assignment is an O(1) operation. This means that no data is copied but the data is shared and the reference counter, if any, is incremented. Before assigning new data, the old data is de-referenced via Mat::release .

◆ operator=() [2/4]

Mat & cv::Mat::operator= ( const MatExpr & expr)

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
exprAssigned matrix expression object. As opposite to the first form of the assignment operation, the second form can reuse already allocated matrix if it has the right size and type to fit the matrix expression result. It is automatically handled by the real function that the matrix expressions is expanded to. For example, C=A+B is expanded to add(A, B, C), and add takes care of automatic C reallocation.

◆ operator=() [3/4]

Mat & cv::Mat::operator= ( const Scalar & s)

Sets all or some of the array elements to the specified value.

Parameters
sAssigned scalar converted to the actual array type.

◆ operator=() [4/4]

Mat & cv::Mat::operator= ( Mat && m)

◆ pop_back()

void cv::Mat::pop_back ( size_t nelems = 1)

Removes elements from the bottom of the matrix.

The method removes one or more rows from the bottom of the matrix.

Parameters
nelemsNumber of removed rows. If it is greater than the total number of rows, an exception is thrown.

◆ ptr() [1/20]

uchar * cv::Mat::ptr ( const int * idx)

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [2/20]

template<typename _Tp >
_Tp * cv::Mat::ptr ( const int * idx)

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [3/20]

const uchar * cv::Mat::ptr ( const int * idx) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [4/20]

template<typename _Tp >
const _Tp * cv::Mat::ptr ( const int * idx) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [5/20]

template<int n>
uchar * cv::Mat::ptr ( const Vec< int, n > & idx)

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [6/20]

template<typename _Tp , int n>
_Tp * cv::Mat::ptr ( const Vec< int, n > & idx)

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [7/20]

template<int n>
const uchar * cv::Mat::ptr ( const Vec< int, n > & idx) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [8/20]

template<typename _Tp , int n>
const _Tp * cv::Mat::ptr ( const Vec< int, n > & idx) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [9/20]

uchar * cv::Mat::ptr ( int i0,
int i1,
int i2 )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [10/20]

template<typename _Tp >
_Tp * cv::Mat::ptr ( int i0,
int i1,
int i2 )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [11/20]

const uchar * cv::Mat::ptr ( int i0,
int i1,
int i2 ) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [12/20]

template<typename _Tp >
const _Tp * cv::Mat::ptr ( int i0,
int i1,
int i2 ) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [13/20]

uchar * cv::Mat::ptr ( int i0 = 0)

Returns a pointer to the specified matrix row.

The methods return uchar* or typed pointer to the specified matrix row. See the sample in Mat::isContinuous to know how to use these methods.

Parameters
i0A 0-based row index.
Examples
samples/cpp/image_alignment.cpp, samples/cpp/train_HOG.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/core/how_to_scan_images/how_to_scan_images.cpp, samples/dnn/colorization.cpp, samples/dnn/openpose.cpp, and samples/dnn/segmentation.cpp.

◆ ptr() [14/20]

template<typename _Tp >
_Tp * cv::Mat::ptr ( int i0 = 0)

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [15/20]

const uchar * cv::Mat::ptr ( int i0 = 0) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [16/20]

template<typename _Tp >
const _Tp * cv::Mat::ptr ( int i0 = 0) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

◆ ptr() [17/20]

uchar * cv::Mat::ptr ( int row,
int col )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
rowIndex along the dimension 0
colIndex along the dimension 1

◆ ptr() [18/20]

template<typename _Tp >
_Tp * cv::Mat::ptr ( int row,
int col )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
rowIndex along the dimension 0
colIndex along the dimension 1

◆ ptr() [19/20]

const uchar * cv::Mat::ptr ( int row,
int col ) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
rowIndex along the dimension 0
colIndex along the dimension 1

◆ ptr() [20/20]

template<typename _Tp >
const _Tp * cv::Mat::ptr ( int row,
int col ) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
rowIndex along the dimension 0
colIndex along the dimension 1

◆ push_back() [1/4]

template<typename _Tp >
void cv::Mat::push_back ( const _Tp & elem)

Adds elements to the bottom of the matrix.

The methods add one or more elements to the bottom of the matrix. They emulate the corresponding method of the STL vector class. When elem is Mat , its type and the number of columns must be the same as in the container matrix.

Parameters
elemAdded element(s).

◆ push_back() [2/4]

void cv::Mat::push_back ( const Mat & m)

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
mAdded line(s).

◆ push_back() [3/4]

template<typename _Tp >
void cv::Mat::push_back ( const Mat_< _Tp > & elem)

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
elemAdded element(s).

◆ push_back() [4/4]

template<typename _Tp >
void cv::Mat::push_back ( const std::vector< _Tp > & elem)

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
elemAdded element(s).

◆ push_back_()

void cv::Mat::push_back_ ( const void * elem)

internal function

◆ rbegin() [1/2]

template<typename _Tp >
std::reverse_iterator< MatIterator_< _Tp > > cv::Mat::rbegin ( )

Same as begin() but for inverse traversal.

◆ rbegin() [2/2]

template<typename _Tp >
std::reverse_iterator< MatConstIterator_< _Tp > > cv::Mat::rbegin ( ) const

◆ release()

void cv::Mat::release ( )

Decrements the reference counter and deallocates the matrix if needed.

The method decrements the reference counter associated with the matrix data. When the reference counter reaches 0, the matrix data is deallocated and the data and the reference counter pointers are set to NULL's. If the matrix header points to an external data set (see Mat::Mat ), the reference counter is NULL, and the method has no effect in this case.

This method can be called manually to force the matrix data deallocation. But since this method is automatically called in the destructor, or by any other method that changes the data pointer, it is usually not needed. The reference counter decrement and check for 0 is an atomic operation on the platforms that support it. Thus, it is safe to operate on the same matrices asynchronously in different threads.

Examples
samples/cpp/stitching_detailed.cpp.

◆ rend() [1/2]

template<typename _Tp >
std::reverse_iterator< MatIterator_< _Tp > > cv::Mat::rend ( )

Same as end() but for inverse traversal.

◆ rend() [2/2]

template<typename _Tp >
std::reverse_iterator< MatConstIterator_< _Tp > > cv::Mat::rend ( ) const

◆ reserve()

void cv::Mat::reserve ( size_t sz)

Reserves space for the certain number of rows.

The method reserves space for sz rows. If the matrix already has enough space to store sz rows, nothing happens. If the matrix is reallocated, the first Mat::rows rows are preserved. The method emulates the corresponding method of the STL vector class.

Parameters
szNumber of rows.

◆ reserveBuffer()

void cv::Mat::reserveBuffer ( size_t sz)

Reserves space for the certain number of bytes.

The method reserves space for sz bytes. If the matrix already has enough space to store sz bytes, nothing happens. If matrix has to be reallocated its previous content could be lost.

Parameters
szNumber of bytes.

◆ reshape() [1/3]

Mat cv::Mat::reshape ( int cn,
const std::vector< int > & newshape ) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
cnNew number of channels. If the parameter is 0, the number of channels remains the same.
newshapeVector with new matrix size by all dimentions. If some sizes are zero, the original sizes in those dimensions are presumed.

◆ reshape() [2/3]

Mat cv::Mat::reshape ( int cn,
int newndims,
const int * newsz ) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
cnNew number of channels. If the parameter is 0, the number of channels remains the same.
newndimsNew number of dimentions.
newszArray with new matrix size by all dimentions. If some sizes are zero, the original sizes in those dimensions are presumed.

◆ reshape() [3/3]

Mat cv::Mat::reshape ( int cn,
int rows = 0 ) const

Changes the shape and/or the number of channels of a 2D matrix without copying the data.

The method makes a new matrix header for *this elements. The new matrix may have a different size and/or different number of channels. Any combination is possible if:

  • No extra elements are included into the new matrix and no elements are excluded. Consequently, the product rows*cols*channels() must stay the same after the transformation.
  • No data is copied. That is, this is an O(1) operation. Consequently, if you change the number of rows, or the operation changes the indices of elements row in some other way, the matrix must be continuous. See Mat::isContinuous .

For example, if there is a set of 3D points stored as an STL vector, and you want to represent the points as a 3xN matrix, do the following:

std::vector<Point3f> vec;
...
Mat pointMat = Mat(vec). // convert vector to Mat, O(1) operation
reshape(1). // make Nx3 1-channel matrix out of Nx1 3-channel.
// Also, an O(1) operation
t(); // finally, transpose the Nx3 matrix.
// This involves copying all the elements
Mat reshape(int cn, int rows=0) const
Changes the shape and/or the number of channels of a 2D matrix without copying the data.
MatExpr t() const
Transposes a matrix.

3-channel 2x2 matrix reshaped to 1-channel 4x3 matrix, each column has values from one of original channels:

Mat m(Size(2, 2), CV_8UC3, Scalar(1, 2, 3));
vector<int> new_shape {4, 3};
m = m.reshape(1, new_shape);

or:

Mat m(Size(2, 2), CV_8UC3, Scalar(1, 2, 3));
const int new_shape[] = {4, 3};
m = m.reshape(1, 2, new_shape);
Parameters
cnNew number of channels. If the parameter is 0, the number of channels remains the same.
rowsNew number of rows. If the parameter is 0, the number of rows remains the same.
Examples
samples/cpp/pca.cpp, and samples/dnn/classification.cpp.

◆ resize() [1/2]

void cv::Mat::resize ( size_t sz)

Changes the number of matrix rows.

The methods change the number of matrix rows. If the matrix is reallocated, the first min(Mat::rows, sz) rows are preserved. The methods emulate the corresponding methods of the STL vector class.

Parameters
szNew number of rows.

◆ resize() [2/2]

void cv::Mat::resize ( size_t sz,
const Scalar & s )

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
szNew number of rows.
sValue assigned to the newly added elements.

◆ row()

Mat cv::Mat::row ( int y) const

Creates a matrix header for the specified matrix row.

The method makes a new header for the specified matrix row and returns it. This is an O(1) operation, regardless of the matrix size. The underlying data of the new matrix is shared with the original matrix. Here is the example of one of the classical basic matrix processing operations, axpy, used by LU and many other algorithms:

inline void matrix_axpy(Mat& A, int i, int j, double alpha)
{
A.row(i) += A.row(j)*alpha;
}
Mat row(int y) const
Creates a matrix header for the specified matrix row.
Note
In the current implementation, the following code does not work as expected:
Mat A;
...
A.row(i) = A.row(j); // will not work
This happens because A.row(i) forms a temporary header that is further assigned to another header. Remember that each of these operations is O(1), that is, no data is copied. Thus, the above assignment is not true if you may have expected the j-th row to be copied to the i-th row. To achieve that, you should either turn this simple assignment into an expression or use the Mat::copyTo method:
Mat A;
...
// works, but looks a bit obscure.
A.row(i) = A.row(j) + 0;
// this is a bit longer, but the recommended method.
A.row(j).copyTo(A.row(i));
Parameters
yA 0-based row index.
Examples
samples/cpp/pca.cpp, and samples/cpp/train_HOG.cpp.

◆ rowRange() [1/2]

Mat cv::Mat::rowRange ( const Range & r) const

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
rRange structure containing both the start and the end indices.

◆ rowRange() [2/2]

Mat cv::Mat::rowRange ( int startrow,
int endrow ) const

Creates a matrix header for the specified row span.

The method makes a new header for the specified row span of the matrix. Similarly to Mat::row and Mat::col , this is an O(1) operation.

Parameters
startrowAn inclusive 0-based start index of the row span.
endrowAn exclusive 0-based ending index of the row span.
Examples
samples/cpp/kmeans.cpp, and samples/dnn/segmentation.cpp.

◆ setDefaultAllocator()

static void cv::Mat::setDefaultAllocator ( MatAllocator * allocator)
static

◆ setTo()

Mat & cv::Mat::setTo ( InputArray value,
InputArray mask = noArray() )

Sets all or some of the array elements to the specified value.

This is an advanced variant of the Mat::operator=(const Scalar& s) operator.

Parameters
valueAssigned scalar converted to the actual array type.
maskOperation mask of the same size as *this. Its non-zero elements indicate which matrix elements need to be copied. The mask has to be of type CV_8U and can have 1 or multiple channels
Examples
samples/dnn/segmentation.cpp.

◆ step1()

size_t cv::Mat::step1 ( int i = 0) const

Returns a normalized step.

The method returns a matrix step divided by Mat::elemSize1() . It can be useful to quickly access an arbitrary matrix element.

◆ t()

MatExpr cv::Mat::t ( ) const

Transposes a matrix.

The method performs matrix transposition by means of matrix expressions. It does not perform the actual transposition but returns a temporary matrix transposition object that can be further used as a part of more complex matrix expressions or can be assigned to a matrix:

Mat A1 = A + Mat::eye(A.size(), A.type())*lambda;
Mat C = A1.t()*A1; // compute (A + lambda*I)^t * (A + lamda*I)
Examples
samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/decompose_homography.cpp, and samples/cpp/tutorial_code/features2D/Homography/homography_from_camera_displacement.cpp.

◆ total() [1/2]

size_t cv::Mat::total ( ) const

Returns the total number of array elements.

The method returns the number of array elements (a number of pixels if the array represents an image).

Examples
samples/cpp/train_HOG.cpp.

◆ total() [2/2]

size_t cv::Mat::total ( int startDim,
int endDim = INT_MAX ) const

Returns the total number of array elements.

The method returns the number of elements within a certain sub-array slice with startDim <= dim < endDim

◆ type()

int cv::Mat::type ( ) const

Returns the type of a matrix element.

The method returns a matrix element type. This is an identifier compatible with the CvMat type system, like CV_16SC3 or 16-bit signed 3-channel array, and so on.

Examples
samples/cpp/grabcut.cpp, samples/cpp/image_alignment.cpp, samples/cpp/train_HOG.cpp, samples/cpp/tutorial_code/ImgProc/Smoothing/Smoothing.cpp, and samples/cpp/videowriter_basic.cpp.

◆ updateContinuityFlag()

void cv::Mat::updateContinuityFlag ( )

internal use method: updates the continuity flag

◆ zeros() [1/3]

static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr cv::Mat::zeros ( int ndims,
const int * sz,
int type )
static

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
ndimsArray dimensionality.
szArray of integers specifying the array shape.
typeCreated matrix type.

◆ zeros() [2/3]

static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr cv::Mat::zeros ( int rows,
int cols,
int type )
static

Returns a zero array of the specified size and type.

The method returns a Matlab-style zero array initializer. It can be used to quickly form a constant array as a function parameter, part of a matrix expression, or as a matrix initializer:

Mat A;
A = Mat::zeros(3, 3, CV_32F);

In the example above, a new matrix is allocated only if A is not a 3x3 floating-point matrix. Otherwise, the existing matrix A is filled with zeros.

Parameters
rowsNumber of rows.
colsNumber of columns.
typeCreated matrix type.
Examples
samples/cpp/fitellipse.cpp.

◆ zeros() [3/3]

static CV_NODISCARD_STD MatExpr cv::Mat::zeros ( Size size,
int type )
static

This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.

Parameters
sizeAlternative to the matrix size specification Size(cols, rows) .
typeCreated matrix type.

Member Data Documentation

◆ allocator

MatAllocator* cv::Mat::allocator

custom allocator

◆ cols

◆ data

uchar* cv::Mat::data

pointer to the data

Examples
samples/dnn/segmentation.cpp.

◆ dataend

const uchar* cv::Mat::dataend

◆ datalimit

const uchar* cv::Mat::datalimit

◆ datastart

const uchar* cv::Mat::datastart

helper fields used in locateROI and adjustROI

◆ dims

int cv::Mat::dims

the matrix dimensionality, >= 2

◆ flags

int cv::Mat::flags

includes several bit-fields:

  • the magic signature
  • continuity flag
  • depth
  • number of channels

◆ rows

◆ size

◆ step

MatStep cv::Mat::step

◆ u

UMatData* cv::Mat::u

interaction with UMat


The documentation for this class was generated from the following files: