Book Image

OpenCV 4 for Secret Agents - Second Edition

By : Joseph Howse
Book Image

OpenCV 4 for Secret Agents - Second Edition

By: Joseph Howse

Overview of this book

OpenCV 4 is a collection of image processing functions and computer vision algorithms. It is open source, supports many programming languages and platforms, and is fast enough for many real-time applications. With this handy library, you’ll be able to build a variety of impressive gadgets. OpenCV 4 for Secret Agents features a broad selection of projects based on computer vision, machine learning, and several application frameworks. To enable you to build apps for diverse desktop systems and Raspberry Pi, the book supports multiple Python versions, from 2.7 to 3.7. For Android app development, the book also supports Java in Android Studio, and C# in the Unity game engine. Taking inspiration from the world of James Bond, this book will add a touch of adventure and computer vision to your daily routine. You’ll be able to protect your home and car with intelligent camera systems that analyze obstacles, people, and even cats. In addition to this, you’ll also learn how to train a search engine to praise or criticize the images that it finds, and build a mobile app that speaks to you and responds to your body language. By the end of this book, you will be equipped with the knowledge you need to advance your skills as an app developer and a computer vision specialist.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Free Chapter
1
Section 1: The Briefing
4
Section 2: The Chase
9
Section 3: The Big Reveal
12
Making WxUtils.py Compatible with Raspberry Pi
13
Learning More about Feature Detection in OpenCV
14
Running with Snakes (or, First Steps with Python)

Getting a cascade file and audio files

Like parts of Chapter 3, Training a Smart Alarm to Recognize the Villain and His Cat, Angora Blue project, Goldgesture performs human face detection and requires one of the cascade files that comes with OpenCV. Also, Goldgesture uses audio clips. The cascade file and audio clips are located in the book's GitHub repository in the Chapter004/Goldgesture/app/src/main/res/raw subfolder. If you are recreating the project from scratch, you should copy these files to your own app/src/main/res/raw folder. This folder is a standard location for files that we want bundled with the Android app in raw (unmodified) form. By default, this folder does not exist in new Android Studio projects.

To create it in Android Studio, right-click on the app/src/main/res folder (in the Project pane) and select New | Android Resource Directory from the context...