NAME

Image::Leptonica::Func::finditalic

VERSION

version 0.04

finditalic.c

finditalic.c

     l_int32   pixItalicWords()

   Locate italic words.  This is an example of the use of
   hit-miss binary morphology with binary reconstruction
   (filling from a seed into a mask).

   To see how this works, run with prog/italic.png.

FUNCTIONS

pixItalicWords

l_int32 pixItalicWords ( PIX *pixs, BOXA *boxaw, PIX *pixw, BOXA **pboxa, l_int32 debugflag )

pixItalicWords()

    Input:  pixs (1 bpp)
            boxaw (<optional> word bounding boxes; can be NULL)
            pixw (<optional> word box mask; can be NULL)
            &boxa (<return> boxa of italic words)
            debugflag (1 for debug output; 0 otherwise)
    Return: 0 if OK, 1 on error

Notes:
    (1) You can input the bounding boxes for the words in one of
        two forms: as bounding boxes (@boxaw) or as a word mask with
        the word bounding boxes filled (@pixw).  For example,
        to compute @pixw, you can use pixWordMaskByDilation().
    (2) Alternatively, you can set both of these inputs to NULL,
        in which case the word mask is generated here.  This is
        done by dilating and closing the input image to connect
        letters within a word, while leaving the words separated.
        The parameters are chosen under the assumption that the
        input is 10 to 12 pt text, scanned at about 300 ppi.
    (3) sel_ital1 and sel_ital2 detect the right edges that are
        nearly vertical, at approximately the angle of italic
        strokes.  We use the right edge to avoid getting seeds
        from lower-case 'y'.  The typical italic slant has a smaller
        angle with the vertical than the 'W', so in most cases we
        will not trigger on the slanted lines in the 'W'.
    (4) Note that sel_ital2 is shorter than sel_ital1.  It is
        more appropriate for a typical font scanned at 200 ppi.

AUTHOR

Zakariyya Mughal <zmughal@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

This software is copyright (c) 2014 by Zakariyya Mughal.

This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.