Mercurial > hg > octave-nkf
view scripts/image/image.m @ 19669:c2031ad6dbe7
Fix octave header includes in audiodevinfo
* audiodevinfo.cc: change includes to use local octave headers
author | Vytautas Jančauskas <unaudio@gmail.com> |
---|---|
date | Wed, 11 Sep 2013 21:32:14 +0300 |
parents | b81b9d079515 |
children | a433244dd697 |
line wrap: on
line source
## Copyright (C) 1994-2012 John W. Eaton ## ## This file is part of Octave. ## ## Octave is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it ## under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by ## the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at ## your option) any later version. ## ## Octave is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but ## WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of ## MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU ## General Public License for more details. ## ## You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License ## along with Octave; see the file COPYING. If not, see ## <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. ## -*- texinfo -*- ## @deftypefn {Function File} {} image (@var{img}) ## @deftypefnx {Function File} {} image (@var{x}, @var{y}, @var{img}) ## @deftypefnx {Function File} {} image (@dots{}, "@var{property}", @var{value}, @dots{}) ## @deftypefnx {Function File} {@var{h} =} image (@dots{}) ## Display a matrix as an indexed color image. ## ## The elements of @var{img} are indices into the current colormap. ## @var{x} and @var{y} are optional 2-element vectors, @w{@code{[min, max]}}, ## which specify the range for the axis labels. If a range is specified as ## @w{@code{[max, min]}} then the image will be reversed along that axis. For ## convenience, @var{x} and @var{y} may be specified as N-element vectors ## matching the length of the data in @var{img}. However, only the first and ## last elements will be used to determine the axis limits. ## @strong{Warning:} @var{x} and @var{y} are ignored when using gnuplot 4.0 ## or earlier. ## ## The optional return value @var{h} is a graphics handle to the image. ## ## Implementation Note: The origin (0, 0) for images is located in the ## upper left. For ordinary plots, the origin is located in the lower ## left. Octave handles this inversion by plotting the data normally, ## and then reversing the direction of the y-axis by setting the ## @code{ydir} property to @qcode{"reverse"}. This has implications whenever ## an image and an ordinary plot need to be overlaid. The recommended ## solution is to display the image and then plot the reversed ydata ## using, for example, @code{flipud (ydata)}. ## ## @seealso{imshow, imagesc, colormap} ## @end deftypefn ## Author: Tony Richardson <arichard@stark.cc.oh.us> ## Created: July 1994 ## Adapted-By: jwe function h = image (varargin) [hax, varargin, nargin] = __plt_get_axis_arg__ ("image", varargin{:}); if (isempty (hax)) hax = gca (); endif chararg = find (cellfun ("isclass", varargin, "char"), 1, "first"); if (nargin == 0 || chararg == 1) img = imread ("default.img"); x = y = []; elseif (nargin == 1 || chararg == 2) img = varargin{1}; x = y = []; elseif (nargin == 2 || chararg == 3) print_usage (); else x = varargin{1}; y = varargin{2}; img = varargin{3}; chararg = 4; endif htmp = __img__ (hax, x, y, img, varargin{chararg:end}); set (hax, "layer", "top"); if (nargout > 0) h = htmp; endif endfunction ## Generic image creation. ## ## The axis values corresponding to the matrix elements are specified in ## @var{x} and @var{y}. If you're not using gnuplot 4.2 or later, these ## variables are ignored. ## Author: Tony Richardson <arichard@stark.cc.oh.us> ## Created: July 1994 ## Adapted-By: jwe function h = __img__ (hax, x, y, img, varargin) if (isempty (img)) error ("__img__: matrix is empty"); endif ## FIXME: Hack for integer formats which use zero-based indexing ## Hack favors correctness of display over size of image in memory. ## True fix will be done in C++ code. if (ndims (img) == 2 && (isinteger (img) || islogical (img))) img = single (img) + 1; endif if (isempty (x)) x = [1, columns(img)]; endif if (isempty (y)) y = [1, rows(img)]; endif xdata = x([1, end]); ydata = y([1, end]); if (numel (x) > 2 && numel (y) > 2) ## Test data for non-linear spacing which is unsupported ## FIXME: Need a better check on linearity tol = 100*eps; dx = diff (x); dy = diff (y); dx = std (dx) / mean (abs (dx)); dy = std (dy) / mean (abs (dy)); if (any (dx > tol) || any (dy > tol)) warning ("image: non-linear X, Y data is ignored. IMG will be shown with linear mapping"); endif endif htmp = __go_image__ (hax, "cdata", img, "xdata", xdata, "ydata", ydata, "cdatamapping", "direct", varargin {:}); px = __image_pixel_size__ (htmp); if (xdata(2) < xdata(1)) xdata = fliplr (xdata); elseif (xdata(2) == xdata(1)) xdata = xdata(1) + [0, columns(img)-1]; endif if (ydata(2) < ydata(1)) ydata = fliplr (ydata); elseif (ydata(2) == ydata(1)) ydata = ydata(1) + [0, rows(img)-1]; endif xlim = xdata + [-px(1), px(1)]; ylim = ydata + [-px(2), px(2)]; ## FIXME -- how can we do this and also get the {x,y}limmode ## properties to remain "auto"? I suppose this adjustment should ## happen automatically in axes::update_axis_limits instead of ## explicitly setting the values here. But then what information is ## available to axes::update_axis_limits to determine that the ## adjustment is necessary? set (hax, "xlim", xlim, "ylim", ylim); if (ndims (img) == 3) if (isinteger (img)) cls = class (img); mn = intmin (cls); mx = intmax (cls); set (hax, "clim", double ([mn, mx])); endif endif set (hax, "view", [0, 90]); if (strcmp (get (hax, "nextplot"), "replace")) ## Always reverse y-axis for images, unless hold is on set (hax, "ydir", "reverse"); endif if (nargout > 0) h = htmp; endif endfunction %!demo %! clf; %! colormap (jet (21)); %! img = 1 ./ hilb (11); %! x = y = -5:5; %! subplot (2,2,1); %! h = image (x, y, img); %! ylabel ("limits = [-5.5, 5.5]"); %! title ("image (x, y, img)"); %! subplot (2,2,2); %! h = image (-x, y, img); %! title ("image (-x, y, img)"); %! subplot (2,2,3); %! h = image (x, -y, img); %! title ("image (x, -y, img)"); %! ylabel ("limits = [-5.5, 5.5]"); %! subplot (2,2,4); %! h = image (-x, -y, img); %! title ("image (-x, -y, img)");