Build a Hello World Program#

Synopsis#

This demonstrates building a simple Hello World ITK program. We instantiate an image and print it to stdout.

Results#

Output:

ITK Hello World!
Image (0x19ca6d0)
  RTTI typeinfo:   itk::Image<unsigned short, 3u>
  Reference Count: 2
  Modified Time: 1
  Debug: Off
  Observers:
    none
  Source: (none)
  Source output name: (none)
  Release Data: Off
  Data Released: False
  Global Release Data: Off
  PipelineMTime: 0
  UpdateMTime: 0
  RealTimeStamp: 0 seconds
  LargestPossibleRegion:
    Dimension: 3
    Index: [0, 0, 0]
    Size: [0, 0, 0]
  BufferedRegion:
    Dimension: 3
    Index: [0, 0, 0]
    Size: [0, 0, 0]
  RequestedRegion:
    Dimension: 3
    Index: [0, 0, 0]
    Size: [0, 0, 0]
  Spacing: [1, 1, 1]
  Origin: [0, 0, 0]
  Direction:
1 0 0
0 1 0
0 0 1

  IndexToPointMatrix:
  1 0 0
0 1 0
0 0 1

  PointToIndexMatrix:
  1 0 0
0 1 0
0 0 1

  Inverse Direction:
  1 0 0
0 1 0
0 0 1

  PixelContainer:
    ImportImageContainer (0x19ca990)
      RTTI typeinfo:   itk::ImportImageContainer<unsigned long, unsigned short>
      Reference Count: 1
      Modified Time: 2
      Debug: Off
      Observers:
        none
      Pointer: 0
      Container manages memory: true
      Size: 0
      Capacity: 0

Code#

C++#

#include "itkImage.h"

int
main()
{
  using ImageType = itk::Image<unsigned short, 3>;
  auto image = ImageType::New();

  std::cout << "ITK Hello World!" << std::endl;
  std::cout << image << std::endl;

  return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}

Python#

#!/usr/bin/env python

import itk

ImageType = itk.Image[itk.UL, 3]
image = ImageType.New()

print("ITK Hello World!")
print(image)

Classes demonstrated#

template<typename TPixel, unsigned int VImageDimension = 2>
class Image : public itk::ImageBase<VImageDimension>

Templated n-dimensional image class.

Images are templated over a pixel type (modeling the dependent variables), and a dimension (number of independent variables). The container for the pixel data is the ImportImageContainer.

Within the pixel container, images are modelled as arrays, defined by a start index and a size.

The superclass of Image, ImageBase, defines the geometry of the image in terms of where the image sits in physical space, how the image is oriented in physical space, the size of a pixel, and the extent of the image itself. ImageBase provides the methods to convert between the index and physical space coordinate frames.

Pixels can be accessed directly using the SetPixel() and GetPixel() methods or can be accessed via iterators that define the region of the image they traverse.

The pixel type may be one of the native types; a Insight-defined class type such as Vector; or a user-defined type. Note that depending on the type of pixel that you use, the process objects (i.e., those filters processing data objects) may not operate on the image and/or pixel type. This becomes apparent at compile-time because operator overloading (for the pixel type) is not supported.

The data in an image is arranged in a 1D array as [][][][slice][row][col] with the column index varying most rapidly. The Index type reverses the order so that with Index[0] = col, Index[1] = row, Index[2] = slice, …

See

ImageBase

See

ImageContainerInterface

ITK Sphinx Examples:

Subclassed by itk::GPUImage< TPixel, VImageDimension >

See itk::Image for additional documentation.