vol.intensity.to.color | R Documentation |
Convert a gray-scale image defined by intensity values in range '[0, 1]' to an image with identical dimensions that contains an R color string (like '#222222') at each position. The color strings are computed from the intensities, by taking the intensity value as the value for all three RGB channels. I.e., the output is still gray-scale, but defined in RGB space. To make it clear, this function does **not** apply a colormap. It only changes the representation of the data, not the resulting colors.
vol.intensity.to.color(volume, scale = NULL)
volume |
numeric array, typically a 3D image with intensities in range '[0, 1]'. This function now also supports numeric matrices (2D images, slices) and numeric vectors (1D). |
scale |
numeric or character string, a scaling to apply to the values. Defaults to NULL, which means *no scaling* and requires the values in ‘volume' to be in rage '[0, 1]'. You can pass a number like 255 or the string ’normalize' to scale based on the data. You can pass the string 'normalize_if_needed' to scale only if the data is *outside* the range '[0, 1]', so that data in range '[0.3, 0.5]' would **not** be rescaled to '[0, 1]'. |
array (or matrix, or vector) of RGB color strings. All of them will represent gray values.
vol.intensity.to.color(c(0.0, 0.5, 1.0));
# output: "#000000" "#808080" "#FFFFFF"
vol.intensity.to.color(c(20, 186, 240), scale="normalize");
vol.intensity.to.color(c(20, 186, 240), scale=255);
vol.intensity.to.color(c(0.0, 0.5, 0.8), scale="normalize");
vol.intensity.to.color(c(0.0, 0.5, 0.8), scale="normalize_if_needed");
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