The following are instructions on how to run the applets
which are part of the HIPR package. These applets are designed
to allow the user to try out the operators which are outlined
in the worksheets.
You may want to review the general instructions first,
which gives a demonstration overview, JAVA details, browser details,
known bugs, etc.
This operator is designed to work with binary images, where
foreground pixels are non-zero and background pixels are zero.
Some of those available in HIPR
have the prefixes given here and .gif as the file extension:
che1, cir1, cir2, cir3, art1, art2, art3, art4, art5, art6, art7,
art8, art9, hse1, mon1thr1, pcb1, pcb2, reg1, rlf1, shu2, son1adp2,
son1adp3, son1thr2, son1thr3, sqr1, stp1, stp2, stp3, tls1, txt2,
wdg2thr2, wdg2thr3.
You can experiment with different images using any of the images
supplied in HIPR or by a URL.
Enter image specifiers (into the edit box at the top of the
screen) either as a full HIPR image filename
(eg. cam1.gif) or by a full URL. Only gif files can
be loaded. Because of JAVA security, the URL should refer to
a publically accessible place, such as your public_html directory.
Pushing the Load Image button or pushing "Return" on the keyboard
causes the specified image to be
loaded.
The input image is displayed in the Input display area
below the control buttons, along with the image size.
Operator Instructions
The output of this operator may be quite dim (as distances from the
boundary could be 1, 2, 3, etc pixels).
The visibility of the output can be enhanced using either:
the threshold button (left click on box), which sets all non-zero pixels to 255, or
the scale and offset boxes, which produce Output = Scale * Input + Offset.
This operator may take some time to run.
The output is displayed to the right of the input image.
Pressing the green start button causes the operator to run.
Pressing the
Stop button causes the operator to stop running. This is useful
if the system being run on is very slow and the operator is taking a
long time to complete.
The time box shows the amount of time which the
operator took to complete the process on the input image.
Image value inspection
You can inspect the input and result image pixel
values by depressing the left mouse button and moving the
cursor over the desired pixel.
The pixel coordinates and gray-level value are displayed
underneath the image.
Note that some images are larger than the displayed
256x256 display window. Larger images are subsampled
in an appropriate manner.
Known Bugs
You can find out about known problems with the system
here.