View Source Evision.Mat (Evision v0.2.9)
Evision Mat
Summary
Types
Types for Evision.Mat
Input argument, Evision.Mat
, Nx.Tensor
, #reference
, or a single number, or a n-tuple of n numbers.
The resulting ok-error tuple when a NIF function can return Evision.Mat
.
Type that represents an Evision.Mat
struct.
Functions
Generate a Mat with shape {1, length}
, where length
is the amount of
numbers starting from from
to to
with step size step
Generate a Mat with a list of number starting from from
to to
with step size step
.
The generated Mat will then be reshaped to the requested shape
if applicable.
This method does not change the underlying data. It only changes the steps when accessing the matrix.
This function does the opposite as to Evision.Mat.last_dim_as_channel/1
.
The method returns the number of matrix channels.
Get a clone an Evision.Mat
.
Data will be copied to the resulting Evision.Mat
.
Returns the depth of a matrix element.
Returns the size of each matrix element channel in bytes.
Returns the matrix element size in bytes.
Create an empty Evision.Mat
.
This function is the Elixir equvilent of calling cv::Mat()
in C++.
Access.fetch implementation for Evision.Mat.
Create Mat from binary (pixel) data
Converts a tensor from Nx.Tensor
to Evision.Mat
.
Converts a tensor from Nx.Tensor
to Evision.Mat
.
Converts a tensor from Nx.Tensor
to a 2D Evision.Mat
.
Generate a Mat with all of its elements equal to number
.
Access.get_and_update/3 implementation for Evision.Mat
Get preferred image encoding when rendering in Kino.
Get the maximum allowed image size to render in Kino.
Get preferred order of Kino.Layout tabs for Evision.Mat
in Livebook.
This function would convert the input tensor with dims [height, width, dims]
to a dims
-channel image with dims [height, width]
.
Create an Evision.Mat
from list literals.
Access.pop/2 is not implemented yet
Display inline image in terminal for iTerm2 users.
Returns the type of a matrix.
Extracts a rectangular submatrix.
Extracts a rectangular submatrix.
Set preferred image encoding when rendering in Kino.
Set the maximum allowed image size to render in Kino.
Set preferred order of Kino.Layout tabs for Evision.Mat
in Livebook.
Returns the cv::MatSize
of the matrix.
Transform an Evision.Mat
to Nx.tensor
.
Get raw pointers
Returns the total number of array elements.
Returns the total number of array elements.
Transpose a matrix
Transpose a matrix
This method returns the type-tuple used by Nx. To get the raw value of cv::Mat.type()
, please use
Evision.Mat.raw_type/1
.
Enumerator
Types
@type enum() :: integer()
@type mat_type() ::
{:u, 8 | 16}
| {:s, 8 | 16 | 32}
| {:f, 32 | 64 | 16}
| :u8
| :u16
| :s8
| :s16
| :s32
| :f32
| :f64
| :f16
Types for Evision.Mat
Shorthand
:u8
:u16
:s16
:s32
:f32
:f64
:f16
Tuple Form
{:u, 8}
{:u, 16}
{:s, 8}
{:s, 16}
{:s, 32}
{:f, 32}
{:f, 64}
{:f, 16}
@type mat_type_tuple_form() :: {:u, 8 | 16} | {:s, 8 | 16 | 32} | {:f, 32 | 64 | 16}
@type maybe_mat_in() :: reference() | t() | Nx.Tensor.t() | number() | tuple()
Input argument, Evision.Mat
, Nx.Tensor
, #reference
, or a single number, or a n-tuple of n numbers.
Evision.Mat
, recommended to use.Nx.Tensor
, recommended to use.Accepting this type so that it's easier to interact with a
Nx.Tensor
.number()
.tuple()
, should be a n-tuple of n numbers.reference()
, not recommended.Only some internal functions will pass the raw reference variables around.
The resulting ok-error tuple when a NIF function can return Evision.Mat
.
@type t() :: %Evision.Mat{ channels: integer(), dims: integer(), raw_type: integer(), ref: reference(), shape: tuple(), type: mat_type() }
Type that represents an Evision.Mat
struct.
channels:
int
.The number of matrix channels.
dims:
int
.Matrix dimensionality.
type:
mat_type
.Type of the matrix elements, following
:nx
's convention.raw_type:
int
.The raw value returned from
int cv::Mat::type()
.shape:
tuple
.The shape of the matrix.
ref:
reference
.The underlying erlang resource variable.
Functions
@spec abs(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec add(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec add(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in(), mat_type()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec arange(integer(), integer(), integer(), mat_type()) :: maybe_mat_out()
Generate a Mat with shape {1, length}
, where length
is the amount of
numbers starting from from
to to
with step size step
Generate a Mat with a list of number starting from from
to to
with step size step
.
The generated Mat will then be reshaped to the requested shape
if applicable.
@spec as_shape(maybe_mat_in(), tuple() | list()) :: maybe_mat_out()
This method does not change the underlying data. It only changes the steps when accessing the matrix.
If intended to change the underlying data to the new shape, please use Evision.Mat.reshape/2
.
@spec as_type(maybe_mat_in(), mat_type()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec at(maybe_mat_in(), integer()) :: number() | {:error, String.t()}
@spec bitwise_and(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec bitwise_not(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec bitwise_or(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec bitwise_xor(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec broadcast_to(maybe_mat_in(), tuple()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec broadcast_to(maybe_mat_in(), tuple(), tuple()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec ceil(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec channel_as_last_dim(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
This function does the opposite as to Evision.Mat.last_dim_as_channel/1
.
If the number of channels of the input Evision.Mat is greater than 1,
then this function would convert the input Evision.Mat with dims dims=list(int())
to a 1
-channel Evision.Mat with dims [dims | channels]
.
If the number of channels of the input Evision.Mat is equal to 1,
- if dims == shape, then nothing happens
otherwise, a new Evision.Mat that has dims=
[dims | channels]
will be returned
@spec channels(maybe_mat_in()) :: non_neg_integer() | {:error, String.t()}
The method returns the number of matrix channels.
@spec clip(maybe_mat_in(), number(), number()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec clone(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
Get a clone an Evision.Mat
.
Data will be copied to the resulting Evision.Mat
.
@spec cmp(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in(), :eq | :gt | :ge | :lt | :le | :ne) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec depth(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
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 )
@spec divide(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec divide(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in(), mat_type()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec dot(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec elemSize1(maybe_mat_in()) :: integer()
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.
@spec elemSize(maybe_mat_in()) :: integer()
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.
@spec empty() :: maybe_mat_out()
Create an empty Evision.Mat
.
This function is the Elixir equvilent of calling cv::Mat()
in C++.
@spec expm1(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec eye(non_neg_integer(), mat_type()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec fetch(t(), list() | integer()) :: {:ok, maybe_mat_out() | nil}
Access.fetch implementation for Evision.Mat.
iex> img = Evision.imread("test/qr_detector_test.png")
%Evision.Mat{
channels: 3,
dims: 2,
type: {:u, 8},
raw_type: 16,
shape: {300, 300, 3},
ref: #Reference<0.809884129.802291734.78316>
}
# Same behaviour as Nx.
# Also, img[0] gives the same result as img[[0]]
# For this example, they are both equvilent of img[[0, :all, :all]]
iex> img[[0]]
%Evision.Mat{
channels: 3,
dims: 2,
type: {:u, 8},
raw_type: 16,
shape: {1, 300, 3},
ref: #Reference<0.809884129.802291731.77296>
}
# same as img[[0..100, 50..200, :all]]
# however, currently we only support ranges with step size 1
#
# **IMPORTANT NOTE**
#
# also, please note that we are using Elixir.Range here
# and Elixir.Range is **inclusive**, i.e, [start, end]
# while cv::Range `{integer(), integer()}` is `[start, end)`
# the difference can be observed in the `shape` field
iex> img[[0..100, 50..200]]
%Evision.Mat{
channels: 3,
dims: 2,
type: {:u, 8},
raw_type: 16,
shape: {101, 151, 3},
ref: #Reference<0.809884129.802291731.77297>
}
iex> img[[{0, 100}, {50, 200}]]
%Evision.Mat{
channels: 3,
dims: 2,
type: {:u, 8},
raw_type: 16,
shape: {100, 150, 3},
ref: #Reference<0.809884129.802291731.77297>
}
# for this example, the result is the same as `Evision.extractChannel(img, 0)`
iex> img[[:all, :all, 0]]
%Evision.Mat{
channels: 1,
dims: 2,
type: {:u, 8},
raw_type: 0,
shape: {300, 300},
ref: #Reference<0.809884129.802291731.77298>
}
iex> img[[:all, :all, 0..1]]
%Evision.Mat{
channels: 2,
dims: 2,
type: {:u, 8},
raw_type: 8,
shape: {300, 300, 2},
ref: #Reference<0.809884129.802291731.77299>
}
# when index is out of bounds
iex> img[[:all, :all, 42]]
{:error, "index 42 is out of bounds for axis 2 with size 3"}
# it works the same way for any dimensional Evision.Mat
iex> mat = Evision.Mat.ones({10, 10, 10, 10, 10}, :u8)
iex> mat[[1..7, :all, 2..6, 3..9, :all]]
%Evision.Mat{
channels: 1,
dims: 5,
type: {:u, 8},
raw_type: 0,
shape: {7, 10, 5, 7, 10},
ref: #Reference<0.3015448455.3766878228.259075>
}
@spec floor(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec from_binary( binary(), mat_type(), pos_integer(), pos_integer(), non_neg_integer() ) :: maybe_mat_out()
Create Mat from binary (pixel) data
binary.
The binary pixel data
type.
one of
[{:u, 8}, {:s, 8}, {:u, 16}, {:s, 16}, {:s, 32}, {:f, 32}, {:f, 64}]
and their corresponding shorthands.rows.
int
Number of rows (i.e., the height of the image)
cols.
int
Number of cols (i.e., the width of the image)
channels.
int
Number of channels.
@spec from_binary_by_shape(binary(), mat_type(), tuple()) :: maybe_mat_out()
Converts a tensor from Nx.Tensor
to Evision.Mat
.
Positional Arguments
- t.
Nx.Tensor
Return
An Evision.Mat
that has the same shape and type.
(except for :s64
, :u32
and :u64
, please see more details at https://github.com/cocoa-xu/evision/issues/48).
@spec from_nx(Nx.Tensor.t(), tuple()) :: t() | {:error, String.t()}
Converts a tensor from Nx.Tensor
to Evision.Mat
.
Positional Arguments
- t.
Nx.Tensor
- as_shape.
tuple
.
Return
An Evision.Mat
that has the specified shape (if the number of elements matches) and the same type as the given tensor.
(except for :s64
, :u32
and :u64
, please see more details at https://github.com/cocoa-xu/evision/issues/48).
Converts a tensor from Nx.Tensor
to a 2D Evision.Mat
.
If the tuple size of the shape is 3, the resulting Evision.Mat
will be a c
-channel 2D image,
where c
is the last number in the shape tuple.
If the tuple size of the shape is 2, the resulting Evision.Mat
will be a 1-channel 2D image.
Otherwise, it's not possible to convert the tensor to a 2D image.
@spec full(tuple(), number(), mat_type()) :: maybe_mat_out()
Generate a Mat with all of its elements equal to number
.
Positional Arguments
shape.
tuple
The expected shape of the resulting
Evision.Mat
number.
number
Element value.
type.
Value type.
Access.get_and_update/3 implementation for Evision.Mat
iex> mat = Evision.Mat.zeros({5, 5}, :u8)
iex> Evision.Mat.to_nx(mat)
#Nx.Tensor<
u8[5][5]
Evision.Backend
[
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0],
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0],
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0],
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0],
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0]
]
>
iex> {old, new} = Evision.Mat.get_and_update(mat, [1..3, 1..3], fn roi ->
{roi, Nx.broadcast(Nx.tensor(255, type: roi.type), roi.shape)}
end)
iex> Evision.Mat.to_nx(new)
#Nx.Tensor<
u8[5][5]
Evision.Backend
[
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0],
[0, 255, 255, 255, 0],
[0, 255, 255, 255, 0],
[0, 255, 255, 255, 0],
[0, 0, 0, 0, 0]
]
>
@spec isContinuous(maybe_mat_in()) :: true | false
@spec isSubmatrix(maybe_mat_in()) :: true | false
@spec kino_render_image_encoding() :: term()
Get preferred image encoding when rendering in Kino.
Default value is Application.compile_env(:evision, :kino_render_image_encoding, :png)
.
@spec kino_render_image_max_size() :: term()
Get the maximum allowed image size to render in Kino.
Default value is Application.compile_env(:evision, :kino_render_image_max_size, {8192, 8192})
.
@spec kino_render_tab_order() :: term()
Get preferred order of Kino.Layout tabs for Evision.Mat
in Livebook.
Default value is Enum.uniq(Application.compile_env(:evision, :kino_render_tab_order, [:image, :raw, :numerical]))
.
@spec last_dim_as_channel(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
This function would convert the input tensor with dims [height, width, dims]
to a dims
-channel image with dims [height, width]
.
Note that OpenCV has limitation on the number of channels. Currently the maximum number of channels is 512
.
Create an Evision.Mat
from list literals.
Example
Creating Evision.Mat
from empty list literal ([]
) is the same as calling Evision.Mat.empty()
.
iex> Evision.Mat.literal!([])
%Evision.Mat{
channels: 1,
dims: 0,
type: {:u, 8},
raw_type: 0,
shape: {},
ref: #Reference<0.1204050731.2031747092.46781>
}
By default, the shape of the Mat will stay as is.
iex> Evision.Mat.literal!([[[1,1,1],[2,2,2],[3,3,3]]], :u8)
%Evision.Mat{
channels: 1,
dims: 3,
type: {:u, 8},
raw_type: 0,
shape: {1, 3, 3},
ref: #Reference<0.512519210.691404819.106300>
}
Evision.Mat.literal/3
will return a valid 2D image
if the keyword argument, as_2d
, is set to true
and if the list literal can be represented as a 2D image.
iex> Evision.Mat.literal!([[[1,1,1],[2,2,2],[3,3,3]]], :u8, as_2d: true)
%Evision.Mat{
channels: 3,
dims: 2,
type: {:u, 8},
raw_type: 16,
shape: {1, 3, 3},
ref: #Reference<0.512519210.691404820.106293>
}
@spec literal(list(), mat_type(), Keyword.t()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec logical_and(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec logical_or(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec logical_xor(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec matrix_multiply(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in(), mat_type() | nil) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec multiply(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec multiply(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in(), mat_type()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec negate(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec number(number(), mat_type()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec ones(tuple(), mat_type()) :: maybe_mat_out()
Access.pop/2 is not implemented yet
@spec quicklook(Nx.Tensor.t()) :: Nx.Tensor.t()
@spec quicklook(t()) :: t()
@spec quicklook(term()) :: term()
Display inline image in terminal for iTerm2 users.
This function will check the value of :display_inline_image_iterm2
in the application config.
If is true
, then it will detect if current session is running in iTerm2
(by checking the environment variable LC_TERMINAL
).
If both are true
, we next check if the image is a 2D image, also if its size is within the limits.
The maximum size can be set in the application config, for example,
config :evision, display_inline_image_iterm2: true
config :evision, display_inline_image_max_size: {8192, 8192}
If it passes all the checks, then it will be displayed as an inline image in iTerm2.
@spec raw_type(maybe_mat_in()) :: integer() | {:error, String.t()}
Returns the type of a matrix.
As Evision.Mat.type/1
returns the type used by Nx, this method gives the raw value of
cv::Mat.type()
@spec reshape(maybe_mat_in(), tuple() | list()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec roi(maybe_mat_in(), {integer(), integer(), integer(), integer()}) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec roi(maybe_mat_in(), [{integer(), integer()} | Range.t() | :all]) :: maybe_mat_out()
Extracts a rectangular submatrix.
Variant 1
Positional Arguments
mat.
maybe_mat_in()
The matrix.
rect.
{int, int, int, int}
The rect that specifies
{x, y, width, height}
.
Return
Extracted submatrix specified as a rectangle. (data is copied)
Variant 2
Positional Arguments
mat.
maybe_mat_in()
The matrix.
ranges.
[{int, int} | :all]
Array of selected ranges along each array dimension.
Return
Extracted submatrix. (data is copied)
@spec roi( maybe_mat_in(), {integer(), integer()} | :all, {integer(), integer()} | :all ) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec roi(maybe_mat_in(), Range.t(), Range.t()) :: maybe_mat_out()
Extracts a rectangular submatrix.
The submatrix data is copied.
Variant 1
Positional Arguments
mat.
maybe_mat_in()
The matrix.
rowRange.
{int, int} | :all
.Start and end row of the extracted submatrix. The upper boundary is not included.
colRange.
{int, int} | :all
.Start and end column of the extracted submatrix. The upper boundary is not included.
Return
Extracted submatrix (data is copied).
Variant 2
Positional Arguments
mat.
maybe_mat_in()
The matrix.
rowRange.
Range.t(step: 1)
.Start and end row of the extracted submatrix. The upper boundary is not included.
colRange.
Range.t(step: 1)
.Start and end column of the extracted submatrix. The upper boundary is not included.
Return
Extracted submatrix (data is copied).
@spec round(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
Set preferred image encoding when rendering in Kino.
Only valid when :kino
>= 0.7 and using in livebook
Positional Arguments
encoding.
When rendering a 2D image with Kino in Livebook the image will first be encoded into either :png or :jpeg:png | :jpeg
.:png
usually has better quality because it is lossless compression, however, it uses more bandwidth to transfer:jpeg
require less bandwidth to pass from the backend to the livebook frontend, but it is lossy compression
@spec set_kino_render_image_max_size({pos_integer(), pos_integer()}) :: term()
Set the maximum allowed image size to render in Kino.
Only valid when :kino
>= 0.7 and using in livebook
Positional Arguments
- size.
{height, width}
.
Set preferred order of Kino.Layout tabs for Evision.Mat
in Livebook.
Only valid when :kino
>= 0.7 and using in Livebook.
Positional Arguments
order:
[atom()]
Default order is
[:image, :raw, :numerical]
, and the corresponding tabs will be:Image | Raw | Numerical
Note that the
:image
tab will not show if theEvision.Mat
is not a 2D image.Also, it's possible to specify any combination (any subset) of these tabs, including the empty one,
[]
, and in that case, the output content in the livebook cell will be the same as:raw
but without any tabs.Simply put,
[]
means to only do the basic inspect and not use Kino.Layout.tabsIt's worth noting that
[] != nil
, becausenil
is default return value whenkino_render_tab_order
is not configured -- hence evision will use the default order,[:image, :raw, :numerical]
in such caseWhen only specifying one type, i.e.,
[:image]
,[:raw]
or[:numerical]
, only one tab will be shown.Furthermore, when
kino_render_tab_order
is configured to[:image]
and when theEvision.Mat
is not a 2D image, it will automatically fallback to:raw
.Simply put,
[:image]
in this case (when only specifying one type) means:displaying the
Evision.Mat
as an image whenever possible, and fallback to:raw
if it's not a 2D image
@spec setTo(maybe_mat_in(), number(), maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec shape(maybe_mat_in()) :: tuple() | {:error, String.t()}
@spec sign(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec size(maybe_mat_in()) :: {non_neg_integer(), [non_neg_integer()]} | {:error, String.t()}
Returns the cv::MatSize
of the matrix.
The method returns a tuple {dims, p}
where dims
is the number of dimensions, and p
is a list with dims
elements.
@spec squeeze(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec subtract(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec subtract(maybe_mat_in(), maybe_mat_in(), mat_type()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec to_batched(maybe_mat_in(), non_neg_integer(), Keyword.t()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec to_batched(maybe_mat_in(), non_neg_integer(), tuple(), Keyword.t()) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec to_binary(maybe_mat_in(), non_neg_integer()) :: binary() | {:error, String.t()}
@spec to_nx(maybe_mat_in(), module()) :: Nx.Tensor.t() | {:error, String.t()}
Transform an Evision.Mat
to Nx.tensor
.
Positional Arguments
mat:
maybe_mat_in()
Evision.Mat
backend:
module()
Nx backend.
Return
If the input Evision.Mat
represents a 2D image, the resulting tensor
will have shape {height, width, channels}
.
Example
iex> %Evision.Mat{} = mat = Evision.imread("/path/to/exist/img.png")
iex> nx_tensor = Evision.Mat.to_nx(mat)
#Nx.Tensor<
u8[1080][1920][3]
[[ ... pixel data ... ]]
>
Get raw pointers
@spec total(maybe_mat_in()) :: non_neg_integer() | {:error, String.t()}
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).
@spec total(maybe_mat_in(), non_neg_integer(), non_neg_integer()) :: non_neg_integer() | {:error, String.t()}
Returns the total number of array elements.
The method returns the number of elements within a certain sub-array slice with start_dim <= dim < end_dim
@spec transpose(maybe_mat_in()) :: maybe_mat_out()
Transpose a matrix
Parameters
mat
. The matrix.by default it reverses the order of the axes.
@spec transpose(maybe_mat_in(), [integer()], Keyword.t()) :: maybe_mat_out()
Transpose a matrix
Parameters
mat.
Evision.Mat
axes.
[int]
It must be a list which contains a permutation of [0,1,..,N-1] where N is the number of axes of
mat
. The i’th axis of the returned array will correspond to the axis numbered axes[i] of the input.opts. Keyword options.
as_shape
. A tuple or list which overwrites the shape of the matrix (the total number of elements must be equal to the one as in its original shape). For example, a 4x4 matrix can be treated as a 2x2x2x2 matrix and transposed withaxes=[2,1,3,0]
in a single call.When specified, it combines the reshape and transpose operation in a single NIF call.
@spec type(maybe_mat_in()) :: mat_type() | {:error, String.t()}
This method returns the type-tuple used by Nx. To get the raw value of cv::Mat.type()
, please use
Evision.Mat.raw_type/1
.
@spec update_roi( maybe_mat_in(), [{integer(), integer()} | Range.t() | :all], maybe_mat_in() ) :: maybe_mat_out()
@spec zeros(tuple(), mat_type()) :: maybe_mat_out()