I have an image. I have identified 4 control points in in image (1920x1080). I want to map the points to a square image, of 1080 on a side.
QPolygonF fromPoly(QVector<QPointF> { ... }); QPolygonF toPoly(QVector<QPointF> {QPoint(squareDimension/2, 0), QPoint(squareDimension, squareDimension/2), QPoint(squareDimension/2, squareDimension), QPoint(0, squareDimension/2)}); Where the toPoly maps to [(960,0), (1080,960), (960,1080), [0, 960)] QTransform tx; if (QTransform::quadToQuad(fromPoly, toPoly, tx)) { out = image.transformed(QImage::trueMatrix(tx, image.width(), image.height())); qDebug() << out.save("sdsd1.jpg"); out = out.copy ((out.width() - squareDimension)/2,(out.height() - squareDimension)/2, squareDimension, squareDimension); qDebug() << out.save("sdsd2.jpg"); } But out is (3270x2179); The control points match up a square in that out image of 1600x1600, which is not right. No matter what I do, using trueMatrix() or not, when I crop the image to 1080x1080, it is too zoomed in. What do I need to go to get all the control points to fit into an image of 1080x1080? Imagine an image (1920x1080) of a clock with some perspective skew. I identify 12,3, 6, and 9 hour positions. I want to create an image of the clock without perspective skew, that is to say, a face-on approximation of the clock. Thanks. _______________________________________________ Interest mailing list Interest@qt-project.org https://lists.qt-project.org/listinfo/interest