[Insight-developers] RE: [Insight-users] neighborhood of a neighborhood
Joshua Cates
cates at sci . utah . edu
Wed, 27 Aug 2003 15:38:25 -0600 (MDT)
Using Jim's code you could grab smallRegion with
outer_iter.GetBoundingBoxAsImageRegion();
Josh.
On Wed, 27 Aug 2003, Joshua Cates wrote:
> Depending on how large your larger neighborhood is, you might not want to
> pay the overhead of maintaining the outer neighborhood iterator. In that
> case just use a regular iterator to keep track of the index and redefine
> smallRegion at each outer iteration.
>
> Josh.
>
> On Wed, 27 Aug 2003, Miller, James V (Research) wrote:
>
> > This may be the same as Josh suggested:
> >
> > The key here is that an iterator walks a prescribed region. So use two
> > neighborhood iterators. The first walks the full region of interest and
> > has a large radius. As the first iteration moves, you define a region off
> > this iterator (convert its location and radius to an start index and size
> > for a region, start index = location - radius, size = 2*radius+1). Define
> > a second iterator that walks this newly defined region.
> >
> > outer_iter = NeighborhoodIteratorType(largeRadius,
> > this->GetInput(), largeRegion);
> > while ( !outer_iter.IsAtEnd() )
> > {
> > // these next two lines probably won't compile, but you get the idea.
> > smallRegion.SetIndex( outer_iter.GetLocation() - 2 * largeRadius );
> > smallRegion.SetSize( 2 * largeRadius + 1 );
> >
> > inner_iter = NeighborhoodIterator(smallRadius, this->GetInput(),
> > smallRegion);
> >
> > while ( !inner_iter.IsAtEnd() )
> > {
> > // do something
> >
> > ++inner_iter;
> > }
> >
> > ++outer_iter;
> > }
> >
> >
> > > -----Original Message-----
> > > From: Joshua Cates [mailto:cates at sci . utah . edu]
> > > Sent: Wednesday, August 27, 2003 1:21 PM
> > > To: John M. Galeotti
> > > Cc: insight-developers at itk . org; insight-users at itk . org
> > > Subject: Re: [Insight-users] neighborhood of a neighborhood
> > >
> > >
> > > Hi John
> > >
> > > One way to do this would be to define a region R and a neighborhood
> > > iterator N on R. You would have to "manually" iterate R through the
> > > image by incrementing its Index and modifying the Size. You
> > > could grab
> > > the Index from a regular iterator moving through the image.
> > >
> > > Josh.
> > >
> > > On Tue, 26 Aug 2003, John M. Galeotti wrote:
> > >
> > > > Is it possible to iterate a small neighborhood through a large
> > > > neighborhood which is itself iterating through a much larger image?
> > > >
> > > > John Galeotti
> > > > jgaleotti at cmu . edu
> > > >
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> > > > Insight-users at itk . org
> > > > http://www . itk . org/mailman/listinfo/insight-users
> > > >
> > >
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> > >
> >
>
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