`PyObject*` to `std::vector<T>` conversion logic:
- If user passed Numpy Array
- If array is planar and T is a primitive type (doesn't require
constructor call) that matches with the element type of array, then
copy element one by one with the respect of the step between array
elements. If compiler is lucky (or brave enough) copy loop can be
vectorized.
For classes that require constructor calls this path is not
possible, because we can't begin an object lifetime without hacks.
- Otherwise fall-back to general case
- Otherwise - execute the general case:
If PyObject* corresponds to Sequence protocol - iterate over the
sequence elements and invoke the appropriate `pyopencv_to` function.
`std::vector<T>` to `PyObject*` conversion logic:
- If `std::vector<T>` is empty - return empty tuple.
- If `T` has a corresponding `Mat` `DataType` than return
Numpy array instance of the matching `dtype` e.g.
`std::vector<cv::Rect>` is returned as `np.ndarray` of shape `Nx4` and
`dtype=int`.
This branch helps to optimize further evaluations in user code.
- Otherwise - execute the general case:
Construct a tuple of length N = `std::vector::size` and insert
elements one by one.
Unnecessary functions were removed and code was rearranged to allow
compiler select the appropriate conversion function specialization.
Currently, the LOADER_DIR is set as os.path.dirname(os.path.abspath(__file__)). This does not point to the true library path if the cv2 folder is symlinked into the Python package directory such that importing cv2 under Python fails. The proposed change only resolves symbolic links correctly by calling os.path.realpath(__file__) first and does not change anything if __file__ contains no symbolic link.
they might be thrown from third-party code (notably Ogre in the ovis
module).
While Linux is kind enough to print them, they cause instant termination
on Windows.
Arguably, they do not origin from OpenCV itself, but still this helps
understanding what went wrong when calling an OpenCV function.
* fixed#17044
1. fixed Python part of the tutorial about using OpenCV XML-YAML-JSON I/O functionality from C++ and Python.
2. added startWriteStruct() and endWriteStruct() methods to FileStorage
3. modifed FileStorage::write() methods to make them work well inside sequences, not only mappings.
* try to fix the doc builder
* added Python regression test for FileStorage I/O API ([TODO] iterating through long sequences can be very slow)
* fixed yaml testing
- It is safe to remove `explicit` keyword for constructors with 1
argument, because it is C++ specific keyword and does not affect any of
the generated binding.
The hard-coded string value "Mat" was used in the two format strings for vector_mat and vector_mat_template, preventing UMat arguments to functions that have these types from working correctly. as noted in #12231.
Fix implicit conversion from array to scalar in python bindings
* Fix wrong conversion behavior for primitive types
- Introduce ArgTypeInfo namedtuple instead of plain tuple.
If strict conversion parameter for type is set to true, it is
handled like object argument in PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords and
converted to concrete type with the appropriate pyopencv_to function
call.
- Remove deadcode and unused variables.
- Fix implicit conversion from numpy array with 1 element to scalar
- Fix narrowing conversion to size_t type.
* Fix wrong conversion behavior for primitive types
- Introduce ArgTypeInfo namedtuple instead of plain tuple.
If strict conversion parameter for type is set to true, it is
handled like object argument in PyArg_ParseTupleAndKeywords and
converted to concrete type with the appropriate pyopencv_to function
call.
- Remove deadcode and unused variables.
- Fix implicit conversion from numpy array with 1 element to scalar
- Fix narrowing conversion to size_t type.·
- Enable tests with wrong conversion behavior
- Restrict passing None as value
- Restrict bool to integer/floating types conversion
* Add PyIntType support for Python 2
* Remove possible narrowing conversion of size_t
* Bindings conversion update
- Remove unused macro
- Add better conversion for types to numpy types descriptors
- Add argument name to fail messages
- NoneType treated as a valid argument. Better handling will be added
as a standalone patch
* Add descriptor specialization for size_t
* Add check for signed to unsigned integer conversion safety
- If signed integer is positive it can be safely converted
to unsigned
- Add check for plain python 2 objects
- Add check for numpy scalars
- Add simple type_traits implementation for better code style
* Resolve type "overflow" false negative in safe casting check
- Move type_traits to separate header
* Add copyright message to type_traits.hpp
* Limit conversion scope for integral numpy types
- Made canBeSafelyCasted specialized only for size_t, so
type_traits header became unused and was removed.
- Added clarification about descriptor pointer