Added OpenVX based processing to FAST (#7720)
* added wrapper for OVX FAST & fixes to IVX wrappers
* fixed type checks in wrappers, array downloading code simplified
* rewritten for new macro use
OpenVX pyrDown wrappers (#7793)
* wrappers for vx_pyramid added
* initial version of pyrDown() wrapper added
* disabled for Khronos
* rewritten for new macro use; border mode added to node
OpenVX optical flow PyrLK wrappers added (#7774)
* wrappers for vx_pyramid added
* initial version of Optical Flow PyrLK wrappers added
* array downloading code simplified
* disabled due to bad accuracy; fixed bugs, e.g. vendor-specific ones
* rewritten for new macro use
Currently, to select a submatrix of a N-dimensional matrix, it requires
two lines of code while only one line of code is required if using a 2D
array.
I added functionality to be able to select an N-dim submatrix using a
vector list instead of a Range pointer. This allows initializer lists to
be used for a one-line selection.
* GSoC 2016 - Adding toggle files to be used by tutorials.
Add a toggle option for tutorials.
* adds a button on the HTML tutorial pages to switch between blocks
* the default option is for languages: one can write a block
for C++ and another one for Python without re-writing the tutorial
Add aliases to the doxyfile.
* adding alises to make a link to previous and next tutorial.
* adding alias to specify the toggle options in the tutorials index.
* adding alias to add a youtube video directly from link.
Add a sample tutorial (mat_mask_opertaions) using the developed aliases:
* youtube alias
* previous and next tutorial alias
* buttons
* languages info for tutorial table of content
* code referances with snippets (and associated sample code files)
* Removing the automatic ordering.
Adding specific toggles for cpp, java and python.
Move all the code to the footer / header and Doxyfile.
Updating documentation.
This allows for an N-dimensional array to be setup in one line instead of two when using C++11 initializer lists. cv::Mat(3, {zDim, yDim, xDim}, ...) can be used instead of having to create an int pointer to hold the size array.