Skip to content

Commit

Permalink
docs: Update ImageInput docs to not use deprecated APIs (AcademySoftw…
Browse files Browse the repository at this point in the history
…areFoundation#3907)

Update the ImageInput documentation to not use the deprecated
`read_image` APIs.

Based on the discussion in AcademySoftwareFoundation#3902

---------

Signed-off-by: Jesse Yurkovich <[email protected]>
  • Loading branch information
jessey-git authored and lgritz committed Jul 15, 2023
1 parent 23751c1 commit 5ca4b06
Showing 1 changed file with 49 additions and 45 deletions.
94 changes: 49 additions & 45 deletions src/doc/imageinput.rst
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -32,23 +32,22 @@ memory, even if that's not the way they're stored in the file):
const ImageSpec &spec = inp->spec();
int xres = spec.width;
int yres = spec.height;
int channels = spec.nchannels;
std::vector<unsigned char> pixels(xres * yres * channels);
inp->read_image(TypeDesc::UINT8, &pixels[0]);
int nchannels = spec.nchannels;
auto pixels = std::unique_ptr<unsigned char[]>(new unsigned char[xres * yres * nchannels]);
inp->read_image(0, 0, 0, nchannels, TypeDesc::UINT8, &pixels[0]);
inp->close();

.. code-tab:: py

import OpenImageIO as oiio
import numpy as np

inp = ImageInput.open(filename)
inp = oiio.ImageInput.open(filename)
if inp :
spec = inp.spec()
xres = spec.width
yres = spec.height
channels = spec.nchannels
pixels = inp.read_image("uint8")
nchannels = spec.nchannels
pixels = inp.read_image(0, 0, 0, nchannels, "uint8")
inp.close()

Here is a breakdown of what work this code is doing:
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -85,8 +84,8 @@ Here is a breakdown of what work this code is doing:
const ImageSpec &spec = inp->spec();
int xres = spec.width;
int yres = spec.height;
int channels = spec.nchannels;
std::vector<unsigned char> pixels (xres*yres*channels);
int nchannels = spec.nchannels;
auto pixels = std::unique_ptr<unsigned char[]>(new unsigned char[xres * yres * nchannels]);

.. code-tab:: py

Expand All @@ -103,17 +102,19 @@ Here is a breakdown of what work this code is doing:
* Read the entire image, hiding all details of the encoding of image data in
the file, whether the file is scanline- or tile-based, or what is the
native format of the data in the file (in this case, we request that it be
automatically converted to unsigned 8-bit integers).
automatically converted to unsigned 8-bit integers). Note that the exact set
of channels are specified as well as the explicit subimage and miplevel for
efficiency and thread-safety.

.. tabs::

.. code-tab:: c++

inp->read_image(TypeDesc::UINT8, &pixels[0]);
inp->read_image(0, 0, 0, nchannels, TypeDesc::UINT8, &pixels[0]);

.. code-tab:: py

pixels = inp->read_image("uint8")
pixels = inp->read_image(0, 0, 0, nchannels, "uint8")
# Note: pixels now contains a NumPy array of the image data.

* Close the file.
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -167,7 +168,7 @@ Individual scanlines may be read using the ``read_scanline()`` API call:
auto inp = ImageInput::open (filename);
const ImageSpec &spec = inp->spec();
if (spec.tile_width == 0) {
std::vector<unsigned char> scanline (spec.width * spec.nchannels);
auto scanline = std::unique_ptr<unsigned char[]>(new unsigned char[spec.width * spec.nchannels]);
for (int y = 0; y < yres; ++y) {
inp->read_scanline (y, 0, TypeDesc::UINT8, &scanline[0]);
// ... process data in scanline[0..width*channels-1] ...
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -235,7 +236,7 @@ scanline image and you should read pixels using ``read_scanline()``, not
} else {
// Tiles
int tilesize = spec.tile_width * spec.tile_height;
std::vector<unsigned char> tile(tilesize * spec.nchannels);
auto tile = std::unique_ptr<unsigned char[]>(new unsigned char[tilesize * spec.nchannels]);
for (int y = 0; y < yres; y += spec.tile_height) {
for (int x = 0; x < xres; x += spec.tile_width) {
inp->read_tile(x, y, 0, TypeDesc::UINT8, &tile[0]);
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -307,15 +308,16 @@ values.
std::unique_ptr<ImageInput> inp = ImageInput::open ("myfile.tif");
const ImageSpec &spec = inp->spec();

int numpixels = spec.image_pixels()
float pixels = new float [numpixels * channels];
int numpixels = spec.image_pixels();
int nchannels = spec.nchannels;
auto pixels = std::unique_ptr<float[]>(new float[numpixels * nchannels]);

inp->read_image (TypeDesc::FLOAT, pixels);
inp->read_image (0, 0, 0, nchannels, TypeDesc::FLOAT, &pixels[0]);

.. code-tab:: py

inp = ImageInput.open("myfile.tif")
pixels = inp.read_image("float")
pixels = inp.read_image(0, 0, 0, nchannels, "float")


Note that ``read_scanline()`` and ``read_tile()`` have a parameter that
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -365,10 +367,11 @@ flexible functionality. A few representative examples follow:

* Flip an image vertically upon reading, by using *negative* ``y`` stride::

unsigned char pixels[spec.width * spec.height * spec.nchannels];
auto pixels = std::unique_ptr<unsigned char[]>(new unsigned char[spec.width * spec.height * spec.nchannels]);
int scanlinesize = spec.width * spec.nchannels * sizeof(pixels[0]);
...
in->read_image (TypeDesc::UINT8,
in->read_image (0, 0, 0, spec.nchannels,
TypeDesc::UINT8,
(char *)pixels+(yres-1)*scanlinesize, // offset to last
AutoStride, // default x stride
-scanlinesize, // special y stride
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -406,10 +409,11 @@ A workaround for this is to call ``read_scanlines``, ``read_tiles`` or
.. code-tab:: c++

// one buffer for all three channels
unsigned char pixels[spec.width * spec.height * spec.nchannels];
auto pixels = std::unique_ptr<unsigned char[]>(new unsigned char[spec.width * spec.height * spec.nchannels]);

for (int channel = 0; channel < spec.nchannels; ++channel) {
file->read_image(
0, 0,
// reading one channel at a time
channel, channel + 1,
TypeDesc::UINT8,
Expand All @@ -422,7 +426,7 @@ A workaround for this is to call ``read_scanlines``, ``read_tiles`` or

pixels = numpy.zeros((spec.nchannels, spec.height, spec.width), "uint8")
for channel in range(spec.nchannels) :
pixels[channel] = file.read_image(channel, channel + 1, "uint8")
pixels[channel] = file.read_image(0, 0, channel, channel + 1, "uint8")

For many formats, this is nearly as fast as reading the image with
interleaved pixel data if the format stores the pixels in an interleaved
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -698,18 +702,17 @@ multi-image files:
.. code-tab:: c++

auto inp = ImageInput::open (filename);
int num_miplevels = 0;
while (inp->seek_subimage (0, num_miplevels, spec)) {
int miplevel = 0;
while (inp->seek_subimage (0, miplevel)) {
const ImageSpec &spec = inp->spec();
int npixels = spec.width * spec.height;
int nchannels = spec.nchannels;
unsigned char *pixels = new unsigned char [npixels * nchannels];
inp->read_image(TypeDesc::UINT8, pixels);
auto pixels = std::unique_ptr<unsigned char[]>(new unsigned char[npixels * nchannels]);
inp->read_image(0, miplevel, 0, nchannels, TypeDesc::UINT8, pixels);

// ... do whatever you want with this level, in pixels ...

delete [] pixels;
++num_miplevels;
++miplevel;
}
// Note: we break out of the while loop when seek_subimage fails
// to find a next MIP level.
Expand All @@ -719,16 +722,15 @@ multi-image files:
.. code-tab:: py

inp = ImageInput::open (filename)
num_miplevels = 0
while inp.seek_subimage(0, num_miplevels, spec) :
miplevel = 0
while inp.seek_subimage(0, miplevel) :
spec = inp.spec()
npixels = spec.width * spec.height
nchannels = spec.nchannels
pixels = inp.read_image ("uint8")
pixels = inp.read_image (0, miplevel, 0, nchannels, "uint8")

# ... do whatever you want with this level, in pixels ...

num_miplevels += 1
miplevel += 1
}
# Note: we break out of the while loop when seek_subimage fails
# to find a next MIP level.
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -764,9 +766,10 @@ OpenEXR file, consisting of R/G/B/A channels in ``half`` and a Z channel in
const ImageSpec &spec = inp->spec();

// Allocate enough space
unsigned char *pixels = new unsigned char [spec.image_bytes(true)];

inp->read_image(TypeDesc::UNKNOWN, /* use native channel formats */
auto pixels = std::unique_ptr<unsigned char[]>(new unsigned char[spec.image_bytes(true)]);
int nchannels = spec.nchannels;
inp->read_image(0, 0, 0, nchannels,
TypeDesc::UNKNOWN, /* use native channel formats */
pixels); /* data buffer */

if (spec.channelformats.size() > 0) {
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -956,8 +959,8 @@ Examples:
// Open the file, passing in the config.
auto inp = ImageInput::open (filename, config);
const ImageSpec &spec = inp->spec();
std::vector<unsigned char> pixels (spec.image_pixels() * spec.nchannels);
inp->read_image (TypeDesc::UINT8, pixels.data());
auto pixels = std::unique_ptr<unsigned char[]>(new unsigned char[spec.image_pixels() * spec.nchannels]);
inp->read_image (0, 0, 0, spec.nchannels, TypeDesc::UINT8, pixels.data());
if (spec.get_int_attribute("oiio:UnassociatedAlpha"))
printf("pixels holds unassociated alpha\n");
else
Expand All @@ -971,7 +974,8 @@ Examples:

# Open the file, passing in the config.
inp = ImageInput.open (filename, config)
pixels = inp.read_image ("uint8")
spec = inp.spec()
pixels = inp.read_image (0, 0, 0, spec.nchannels, "uint8")
if (spec["oiio:UnassociatedAlpha"] == 1)
print("pixels holds unassociated alpha")
else
Expand Down Expand Up @@ -1083,10 +1087,10 @@ elaborated with error checking and reporting:
const ImageSpec &spec = inp->spec();
int xres = spec.width;
int yres = spec.height;
int channels = spec.nchannels;
std::vector<unsigned char> pixels(xres * yres * channels);
int nchannels = spec.nchannels;
auto pixels = std::unique_ptr<unsigned char[]>(new unsigned char[xres * yres * nchannels]);
if (! inp->read_image (TypeDesc::UINT8, &pixels[0])) {
if (! inp->read_image(0, 0, 0, nchannels, TypeDesc::UINT8, &pixels[0])) {
std::cerr << "Could not read pixels from " << filename
<< ", error = " << inp->geterror() << "\n";
return;
Expand All @@ -1111,9 +1115,9 @@ elaborated with error checking and reporting:
spec = inp.spec()
xres = spec.width
yres = spec.height
channels = spec.nchannels
nchannels = spec.nchannels

pixels = inp.read_image("uint8")
pixels = inp.read_image(0, 0, 0, nchannels, "uint8")
if pixels is None :
print("Could not read pixels from", filename, ", error =", inp.geterror())
return
Expand Down

0 comments on commit 5ca4b06

Please sign in to comment.