mirror of
https://github.com/opencv/opencv.git
synced 2024-11-28 21:20:18 +08:00
Merge pull request #12705 from berak:imread_document_grayscale
This commit is contained in:
commit
9253e8bda2
@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ namespace cv
|
||||
//! Imread flags
|
||||
enum ImreadModes {
|
||||
IMREAD_UNCHANGED = -1, //!< If set, return the loaded image as is (with alpha channel, otherwise it gets cropped).
|
||||
IMREAD_GRAYSCALE = 0, //!< If set, always convert image to the single channel grayscale image.
|
||||
IMREAD_GRAYSCALE = 0, //!< If set, always convert image to the single channel grayscale image (codec internal conversion).
|
||||
IMREAD_COLOR = 1, //!< If set, always convert image to the 3 channel BGR color image.
|
||||
IMREAD_ANYDEPTH = 2, //!< If set, return 16-bit/32-bit image when the input has the corresponding depth, otherwise convert it to 8-bit.
|
||||
IMREAD_ANYCOLOR = 4, //!< If set, the image is read in any possible color format.
|
||||
@ -155,6 +155,8 @@ Currently, the following file formats are supported:
|
||||
|
||||
- The function determines the type of an image by the content, not by the file extension.
|
||||
- In the case of color images, the decoded images will have the channels stored in **B G R** order.
|
||||
- When using IMREAD_GRAYSCALE, the codec's internal grayscale conversion will be used, if available.
|
||||
Results may differ to the output of cvtColor()
|
||||
- On Microsoft Windows\* OS and MacOSX\*, the codecs shipped with an OpenCV image (libjpeg,
|
||||
libpng, libtiff, and libjasper) are used by default. So, OpenCV can always read JPEGs, PNGs,
|
||||
and TIFFs. On MacOSX, there is also an option to use native MacOSX image readers. But beware
|
||||
|
Loading…
Reference in New Issue
Block a user