MATLAB Function Reference    
Image Properties

Image Properties

This section lists property names along with the types of values each property accepts.

AlphaData                    m-by-n matrix of double or uint8

The transparency data. A matrix of non-NaN values specifying the transparency of each element in the image data. The AlphaData can be of class double or uint8.

MATLAB determines the transparency in one of three ways:

AlphaDataMapping             {none} | direct | scaled

Transparency mapping method. This property determines how MATLAB interprets indexed alpha data. It can be any of the following:

BusyAction                   cancel | {queue}

Callback routine interruption. The BusyAction property enables you to control how MATLAB handles events that potentially interrupt executing callback routines. If there is a callback routine executing, subsequently invoked callback routes always attempt to interrupt it. If the Interruptible property of the object whose callback is executing is set to on (the default), then interruption occurs at the next point where the event queue is processed. If the Interruptible property is off, the BusyAction property (of the object owning the executing callback) determines how MATLAB handles the event. The choices are:

ButtonDownFcn                string

Button press callback routine. A callback routine that executes whenever you press a mouse button while the pointer is over the image object. Define this routine as a string that is a valid MATLAB expression or the name of an M-file. The expression executes in the MATLAB workspace.

CData                        matrix or m-by-n-by-3 array

The image data. A matrix of values specifying the color of each rectangular area defining the image. image(C) assigns the values of C to CData. MATLAB determines the coloring of the image in one of three ways:

Note that the behavior of NaNs in image CData is not defined. See the image AlphaData property for information on using transparency with images.

A true color specification for CData requires an m-by-n-by-3 array of RGB values. The first page contains the red component, the second page the green component, and the third page the blue component of each element in the image. RGB values range from 0 to 1. The following picture illustrates the relative dimensions of CData for the two color models.

If CData has only one row or column, the height or width respectively is always one data unit and is centered about the first YData or XData element respectively. For example, using a 4-by-1 matrix of random data,

produces:

CDataMapping                 scaled | {direct}

Direct or scaled indexed colors. This property determines whether MATLAB interprets the values in CData as indices into the figure colormap (the default) or scales the values according to the values of the axes CLim property.

When CDataMapping is direct, the values of CData should be in the range 1 to length(get(gcf,'Colormap')). If you use true color specification for CData, this property has no effect.

Children                     handles

The empty matrix; image objects have no children.

Clipping                     on | off

Clipping mode. By default, MATLAB clips images to the axes rectangle. If you set Clipping to off, the image can display outside the axes rectangle. For example, if you create an image, set hold to on, freeze axis scaling (axis manual), and then create a larger image, it extends beyond the axis limits.

CreateFcn                    string

Callback routine executed during object creation. This property defines a callback routine that executes when MATLAB creates an image object. You must define this property as a default value for images. For example, the statement,

defines a default value on the root level that sets the aspect ratio and the axis limits so the image has square pixels. MATLAB executes this routine after setting all image properties. Setting this property on an existing image object has no effect.

The handle of the object whose CreateFcn is being executed is accessible only through the root CallbackObject property, which you can query using gcbo.

DeleteFcn                    string

Delete image callback routine. A callback routine that executes when you delete the image object (i.e., when you issue a delete command or clear the axes or figure containing the image). MATLAB executes the routine before destroying the object's properties so these values are available to the callback routine.

The handle of the object whose DeleteFcn is being executed is accessible only through the root CallbackObject property, which you can query using gcbo.

EraseMode                    {normal} | none | xor | background

Erase mode. This property controls the technique MATLAB uses to draw and erase image objects. Alternative erase modes are useful for creating animated sequences, where control of the way individual objects redraw is necessary to improve performance and obtain the desired effect.

MATLAB always prints figures as if the EraseMode of all objects is normal. This means graphics objects created with EraseMode set to none, xor, or background can look different on screen than on paper. On screen, MATLAB may mathematically combine layers of colors (e.g., XORing a pixel color with that of the pixel behind it) and ignore three-dimensional sorting to obtain greater rendering speed. However, these techniques are not applied to the printed output.

You can use the MATLAB getframe command or other screen capture application to create an image of a figure containing non-normal mode objects.

HandleVisibility             {on} | callback | off

Control access to object's handle by command-line users and GUIs. This property determines when an object's handle is visible in its parent's list of children. HandleVisibility is useful for preventing command-line users from accidentally drawing into or deleting a figure that contains only user interface devices (such as a dialog box).

Handles are always visible when HandleVisibility is on.

Setting HandleVisibility to callback causes handles to be visible from within callback routines or functions invoked by callback routines, but not from within functions invoked from the command line. This provide a means to protect GUIs from command-line users, while allowing callback routines to have complete access to object handles.

Setting HandleVisibility to off makes handles invisible at all times. This may be necessary when a callback routine invokes a function that might potentially damage the GUI (such as evaling a user-typed string), and so temporarily hides its own handles during the execution of that function.

When a handle is not visible in its parent's list of children, it cannot be returned by functions that obtain handles by searching the object hierarchy or querying handle properties. This includes get, findobj, gca, gcf, gco, newplot, cla, clf, and close.

When a handle's visibility is restricted using callback or off, the object's handle does not appear in its parent's Children property, figures do not appear in the root's CurrentFigure property, objects do not appear in the root's CallbackObject property or in the figure's CurrentObject property, and axes do not appear in their parent's CurrentAxes property.

You can set the root ShowHiddenHandles property to on to make all handles visible, regardless of their HandleVisibility settings (this does not affect the values of the HandleVisibility properties).

Handles that are hidden are still valid. If you know an object's handle, you can set and get its properties, and pass it to any function that operates on handles.

HitTest                      {on} | off

Selectable by mouse click. HitTest determines if the image can become the current object (as returned by the gco command and the figure CurrentObject property) as a result of a mouse click on the image. If HitTest is off, clicking on the image selects the object below it (which maybe the axes containing it).

Interruptible                {on} | off

Callback routine interruption mode. The Interruptible property controls whether an image callback routine can be interrupted by subsequently invoked callback routines. Only callback routines defined for the ButtonDownFcn are affected by the Interruptible property. MATLAB checks for events that can interrupt a callback routine only when it encounters a drawnow, figure, getframe, or pause command in the routine.

Parent                       handle of parent axes

Image's parent. The handle of the image object's parent axes. You can move an image object to another axes by changing this property to the new axes handle.

Selected                     on | {off}

Is object selected? When this property is on, MATLAB displays selection handles if the SelectionHighlight property is also on. You can, for example, define the ButtonDownFcn to set this property, allowing users to select the object with the mouse.

SelectionHighlight           {on} | off

Objects highlight when selected. When the Selected property is on, MATLAB indicates the selected state by drawing four edge handles and four corner handles. When SelectionHighlight is off, MATLAB does not draw the handles.

Tag                          string

User-specified object label. The Tag property provides a means to identify graphics objects with a user-specified label. This is particularly useful when constructing interactive graphics programs that would otherwise need to define object handles as global variables or pass them as arguments between callback routines. You can define Tag as any string.

Type                         string (read only)

Type of graphics object. This property contains a string that identifies the class of graphics object. For image objects, Type is always 'image'.

UIContextMenu                handle of a uicontextmenu object

Associate a context menu with the image. Assign this property the handle of a uicontextmenu object created in the same figure as the image. Use the uicontextmenu function to create the context menu. MATLAB displays the context menu whenever you right-click over the image.

UserData                     matrix

User specified data. This property can be any data you want to associate with the image object. The image does not use this property, but you can access it using set and get.

Visible                      {on} | off

Image visibility. By default, image objects are visible. Setting this property to off prevents the image from being displayed. However, the object still exists and you can set and query its properties.

XData                        [1 size(CData,2)] by default

Control placement of image along x-axis. A vector specifying the locations of the centers of the elements CData(1,1) and CData(m,n), where CData has a size of m-by-n. Element CData(1,1) is centered over the coordinate defined by the first elements in XData and YData. Element CData(m,n) is centered over the coordinate defined by the last elements in XData and YData. The centers of the remaining elements of CData are evenly distributed between those two points.

The width of each CData element is determined by the expression:

You can also specify a single value for XData. In this case, image centers the first element at this coordinate and centers each following element one unit apart.

YData                        [1 size(CData,1)] by default

Control placement of image along y-axis. A vector specifying the locations of the centers of the elements CData(1,1) and CData(m,n), where CData has a size of m-by-n. Element CData(1,1) is centered over the coordinate defined by the first elements in XData and YData. Element CData(m,n) is centered over the coordinate defined by the last elements in XData and YData. The centers of the remaining elements of CData are evenly distributed between those two points.

The height of each CData element is determined by the expression:

You can also specify a single value for YData. In this case, image centers the first element at this coordinate and centers each following elements one unit apart.

See Also

colormap, imfinfo, imread, imwrite, pcolor, newplot, surface

Displaying Bit-Mapped Images


 image imagesc