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If you are a beginner React Developer and want to know how to display a list of items on the browser screen then you are at the right place.
In this tutorial, we are going to learn how to show a simple list item, a list of objects, Nesting Lists in React, and lastly, we will have a look at how to update the state of the React list.
#react
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Mocking library for TypeScript inspired by http://mockito.org/
mock
) (also abstract classes) #examplespy
) #examplewhen
) via:verify
)reset
, resetCalls
) #example, #examplecapture
) #example'Expected "convertNumberToString(strictEqual(3))" to be called 2 time(s). But has been called 1 time(s).'
)npm install ts-mockito --save-dev
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// Getting instance from mock
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// Using instance in source code
foo.getBar(3);
foo.getBar(5);
// Explicit, readable verification
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(3)).called();
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(anything())).called();
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// stub method before execution
when(mockedFoo.getBar(3)).thenReturn('three');
// Getting instance
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// prints three
console.log(foo.getBar(3));
// prints null, because "getBar(999)" was not stubbed
console.log(foo.getBar(999));
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// stub getter before execution
when(mockedFoo.sampleGetter).thenReturn('three');
// Getting instance
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// prints three
console.log(foo.sampleGetter);
Syntax is the same as with getter values.
Please note, that stubbing properties that don't have getters only works if Proxy object is available (ES6).
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// Getting instance
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// Some calls
foo.getBar(1);
foo.getBar(2);
foo.getBar(2);
foo.getBar(3);
// Call count verification
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).once(); // was called with arg === 1 only once
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(2)).twice(); // was called with arg === 2 exactly two times
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(between(2, 3))).thrice(); // was called with arg between 2-3 exactly three times
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(anyNumber()).times(4); // was called with any number arg exactly four times
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(2)).atLeast(2); // was called with arg === 2 min two times
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(anything())).atMost(4); // was called with any argument max four times
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(4)).never(); // was never called with arg === 4
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
let mockedBar:Bar = mock(Bar);
// Getting instance
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
let bar:Bar = instance(mockedBar);
// Some calls
foo.getBar(1);
bar.getFoo(2);
// Call order verification
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).calledBefore(mockedBar.getFoo(2)); // foo.getBar(1) has been called before bar.getFoo(2)
verify(mockedBar.getFoo(2)).calledAfter(mockedFoo.getBar(1)); // bar.getFoo(2) has been called before foo.getBar(1)
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).calledBefore(mockedBar.getFoo(999999)); // throws error (mockedBar.getFoo(999999) has never been called)
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
when(mockedFoo.getBar(10)).thenThrow(new Error('fatal error'));
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
try {
foo.getBar(10);
} catch (error:Error) {
console.log(error.message); // 'fatal error'
}
You can also stub method with your own implementation
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
when(mockedFoo.sumTwoNumbers(anyNumber(), anyNumber())).thenCall((arg1:number, arg2:number) => {
return arg1 * arg2;
});
// prints '50' because we've changed sum method implementation to multiply!
console.log(foo.sumTwoNumbers(5, 10));
You can also stub method to resolve / reject promise
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
when(mockedFoo.fetchData("a")).thenResolve({id: "a", value: "Hello world"});
when(mockedFoo.fetchData("b")).thenReject(new Error("b does not exist"));
You can reset just mock call counter
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// Getting instance
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// Some calls
foo.getBar(1);
foo.getBar(1);
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).twice(); // getBar with arg "1" has been called twice
// Reset mock
resetCalls(mockedFoo);
// Call count verification
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).never(); // has never been called after reset
You can also reset calls of multiple mocks at once resetCalls(firstMock, secondMock, thirdMock)
Or reset mock call counter with all stubs
// Creating mock
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
when(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).thenReturn("one").
// Getting instance
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// Some calls
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // "one" - as defined in stub
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // "one" - as defined in stub
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).twice(); // getBar with arg "1" has been called twice
// Reset mock
reset(mockedFoo);
// Call count verification
verify(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).never(); // has never been called after reset
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // null - previously added stub has been removed
You can also reset multiple mocks at once reset(firstMock, secondMock, thirdMock)
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
// Call method
foo.sumTwoNumbers(1, 2);
// Check first arg captor values
const [firstArg, secondArg] = capture(mockedFoo.sumTwoNumbers).last();
console.log(firstArg); // prints 1
console.log(secondArg); // prints 2
You can also get other calls using first()
, second()
, byCallIndex(3)
and more...
You can set multiple returning values for same matching values
const mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
when(mockedFoo.getBar(anyNumber())).thenReturn('one').thenReturn('two').thenReturn('three');
const foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // one
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // two
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // three
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // three - last defined behavior will be repeated infinitely
Another example with specific values
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
when(mockedFoo.getBar(1)).thenReturn('one').thenReturn('another one');
when(mockedFoo.getBar(2)).thenReturn('two');
let foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // one
console.log(foo.getBar(2)); // two
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // another one
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // another one - this is last defined behavior for arg '1' so it will be repeated
console.log(foo.getBar(2)); // two
console.log(foo.getBar(2)); // two - this is last defined behavior for arg '2' so it will be repeated
Short notation:
const mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// You can specify return values as multiple thenReturn args
when(mockedFoo.getBar(anyNumber())).thenReturn('one', 'two', 'three');
const foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // one
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // two
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // three
console.log(foo.getBar(1)); // three - last defined behavior will be repeated infinity
Possible errors:
const mockedFoo:Foo = mock(Foo);
// When multiple matchers, matches same result:
when(mockedFoo.getBar(anyNumber())).thenReturn('one');
when(mockedFoo.getBar(3)).thenReturn('one');
const foo:Foo = instance(mockedFoo);
foo.getBar(3); // MultipleMatchersMatchSameStubError will be thrown, two matchers match same method call
You can mock interfaces too, just instead of passing type to mock
function, set mock
function generic type Mocking interfaces requires Proxy
implementation
let mockedFoo:Foo = mock<FooInterface>(); // instead of mock(FooInterface)
const foo: SampleGeneric<FooInterface> = instance(mockedFoo);
You can mock abstract classes
const mockedFoo: SampleAbstractClass = mock(SampleAbstractClass);
const foo: SampleAbstractClass = instance(mockedFoo);
You can also mock generic classes, but note that generic type is just needed by mock type definition
const mockedFoo: SampleGeneric<SampleInterface> = mock(SampleGeneric);
const foo: SampleGeneric<SampleInterface> = instance(mockedFoo);
You can partially mock an existing instance:
const foo: Foo = new Foo();
const spiedFoo = spy(foo);
when(spiedFoo.getBar(3)).thenReturn('one');
console.log(foo.getBar(3)); // 'one'
console.log(foo.getBaz()); // call to a real method
You can spy on plain objects too:
const foo = { bar: () => 42 };
const spiedFoo = spy(foo);
foo.bar();
console.log(capture(spiedFoo.bar).last()); // [42]
Author: NagRock
Source Code: https://github.com/NagRock/ts-mockito
License: MIT license
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If you are undertaking a mobile app development for your start-up or enterprise, you are likely wondering whether to use React Native. As a popular development framework, React Native helps you to develop near-native mobile apps. However, you are probably also wondering how close you can get to a native app by using React Native. How native is React Native?
In the article, we discuss the similarities between native mobile development and development using React Native. We also touch upon where they differ and how to bridge the gaps. Read on.
Let’s briefly set the context first. We will briefly touch upon what React Native is and how it differs from earlier hybrid frameworks.
React Native is a popular JavaScript framework that Facebook has created. You can use this open-source framework to code natively rendering Android and iOS mobile apps. You can use it to develop web apps too.
Facebook has developed React Native based on React, its JavaScript library. The first release of React Native came in March 2015. At the time of writing this article, the latest stable release of React Native is 0.62.0, and it was released in March 2020.
Although relatively new, React Native has acquired a high degree of popularity. The “Stack Overflow Developer Survey 2019” report identifies it as the 8th most loved framework. Facebook, Walmart, and Bloomberg are some of the top companies that use React Native.
The popularity of React Native comes from its advantages. Some of its advantages are as follows:
Are you wondering whether React Native is just another of those hybrid frameworks like Ionic or Cordova? It’s not! React Native is fundamentally different from these earlier hybrid frameworks.
React Native is very close to native. Consider the following aspects as described on the React Native website:
Due to these factors, React Native offers many more advantages compared to those earlier hybrid frameworks. We now review them.
#android app #frontend #ios app #mobile app development #benefits of react native #is react native good for mobile app development #native vs #pros and cons of react native #react mobile development #react native development #react native experience #react native framework #react native ios vs android #react native pros and cons #react native vs android #react native vs native #react native vs native performance #react vs native #why react native #why use react native
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React 17 tutorials. Here, you can find basic to advance react 17 tutorial.
#react 17 example #react 17 tutorials #react get post methods #react image upload preview #react google address #react bootstrap navbar
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What is face recognition? Or what is recognition? When you look at an apple fruit, your mind immediately tells you that this is an apple fruit. This process, your mind telling you that this is an apple fruit is recognition in simple words. So what is face recognition then? I am sure you have guessed it right. When you look at your friend walking down the street or a picture of him, you recognize that he is your friend Paulo. Interestingly when you look at your friend or a picture of him you look at his face first before looking at anything else. Ever wondered why you do that? This is so that you can recognize him by looking at his face. Well, this is you doing face recognition.
But the real question is how does face recognition works? It is quite simple and intuitive. Take a real life example, when you meet someone first time in your life you don't recognize him, right? While he talks or shakes hands with you, you look at his face, eyes, nose, mouth, color and overall look. This is your mind learning or training for the face recognition of that person by gathering face data. Then he tells you that his name is Paulo. At this point your mind knows that the face data it just learned belongs to Paulo. Now your mind is trained and ready to do face recognition on Paulo's face. Next time when you will see Paulo or his face in a picture you will immediately recognize him. This is how face recognition work. The more you will meet Paulo, the more data your mind will collect about Paulo and especially his face and the better you will become at recognizing him.
Now the next question is how to code face recognition with OpenCV, after all this is the only reason why you are reading this article, right? OK then. You might say that our mind can do these things easily but to actually code them into a computer is difficult? Don't worry, it is not. Thanks to OpenCV, coding face recognition is as easier as it feels. The coding steps for face recognition are same as we discussed it in real life example above.
OpenCV comes equipped with built in face recognizer, all you have to do is feed it the face data. It's that simple and this how it will look once we are done coding it.
OpenCV has three built in face recognizers and thanks to OpenCV's clean coding, you can use any of them by just changing a single line of code. Below are the names of those face recognizers and their OpenCV calls.
cv2.face.createEigenFaceRecognizer()
cv2.face.createFisherFaceRecognizer()
cv2.face.createLBPHFaceRecognizer()
We have got three face recognizers but do you know which one to use and when? Or which one is better? I guess not. So why not go through a brief summary of each, what you say? I am assuming you said yes :) So let's dive into the theory of each.
This algorithm considers the fact that not all parts of a face are equally important and equally useful. When you look at some one you recognize him/her by his distinct features like eyes, nose, cheeks, forehead and how they vary with respect to each other. So you are actually focusing on the areas of maximum change (mathematically speaking, this change is variance) of the face. For example, from eyes to nose there is a significant change and same is the case from nose to mouth. When you look at multiple faces you compare them by looking at these parts of the faces because these parts are the most useful and important components of a face. Important because they catch the maximum change among faces, change the helps you differentiate one face from the other. This is exactly how EigenFaces face recognizer works.
EigenFaces face recognizer looks at all the training images of all the persons as a whole and try to extract the components which are important and useful (the components that catch the maximum variance/change) and discards the rest of the components. This way it not only extracts the important components from the training data but also saves memory by discarding the less important components. These important components it extracts are called principal components. Below is an image showing the principal components extracted from a list of faces.
Principal Components source
You can see that principal components actually represent faces and these faces are called eigen faces and hence the name of the algorithm.
So this is how EigenFaces face recognizer trains itself (by extracting principal components). Remember, it also keeps a record of which principal component belongs to which person. One thing to note in above image is that Eigenfaces algorithm also considers illumination as an important component.
Later during recognition, when you feed a new image to the algorithm, it repeats the same process on that image as well. It extracts the principal component from that new image and compares that component with the list of components it stored during training and finds the component with the best match and returns the person label associated with that best match component.
Easy peasy, right? Next one is easier than this one.
This algorithm is an improved version of EigenFaces face recognizer. Eigenfaces face recognizer looks at all the training faces of all the persons at once and finds principal components from all of them combined. By capturing principal components from all the of them combined you are not focusing on the features that discriminate one person from the other but the features that represent all the persons in the training data as a whole.
This approach has drawbacks, for example, images with sharp changes (like light changes which is not a useful feature at all) may dominate the rest of the images and you may end up with features that are from external source like light and are not useful for discrimination at all. In the end, your principal components will represent light changes and not the actual face features.
Fisherfaces algorithm, instead of extracting useful features that represent all the faces of all the persons, it extracts useful features that discriminate one person from the others. This way features of one person do not dominate over the others and you have the features that discriminate one person from the others.
Below is an image of features extracted using Fisherfaces algorithm.
Fisher Faces source
You can see that features extracted actually represent faces and these faces are called fisher faces and hence the name of the algorithm.
One thing to note here is that even in Fisherfaces algorithm if multiple persons have images with sharp changes due to external sources like light they will dominate over other features and affect recognition accuracy.
Getting bored with this theory? Don't worry, only one face recognizer is left and then we will dive deep into the coding part.
I wrote a detailed explaination on Local Binary Patterns Histograms in my previous article on face detection using local binary patterns histograms. So here I will just give a brief overview of how it works.
We know that Eigenfaces and Fisherfaces are both affected by light and in real life we can't guarantee perfect light conditions. LBPH face recognizer is an improvement to overcome this drawback.
Idea is to not look at the image as a whole instead find the local features of an image. LBPH alogrithm try to find the local structure of an image and it does that by comparing each pixel with its neighboring pixels.
Take a 3x3 window and move it one image, at each move (each local part of an image), compare the pixel at the center with its neighbor pixels. The neighbors with intensity value less than or equal to center pixel are denoted by 1 and others by 0. Then you read these 0/1 values under 3x3 window in a clockwise order and you will have a binary pattern like 11100011 and this pattern is local to some area of the image. You do this on whole image and you will have a list of local binary patterns.
LBP Labeling
Now you get why this algorithm has Local Binary Patterns in its name? Because you get a list of local binary patterns. Now you may be wondering, what about the histogram part of the LBPH? Well after you get a list of local binary patterns, you convert each binary pattern into a decimal number (as shown in above image) and then you make a histogram of all of those values. A sample histogram looks like this.
Sample Histogram
I guess this answers the question about histogram part. So in the end you will have one histogram for each face image in the training data set. That means if there were 100 images in training data set then LBPH will extract 100 histograms after training and store them for later recognition. Remember, algorithm also keeps track of which histogram belongs to which person.
Later during recognition, when you will feed a new image to the recognizer for recognition it will generate a histogram for that new image, compare that histogram with the histograms it already has, find the best match histogram and return the person label associated with that best match histogram.
Below is a list of faces and their respective local binary patterns images. You can see that the LBP images are not affected by changes in light conditions.
LBP Faces source
The theory part is over and now comes the coding part! Ready to dive into coding? Let's get into it then.
Coding Face Recognition with OpenCV
The Face Recognition process in this tutorial is divided into three steps.
[There should be a visualization diagram for above steps here]
To detect faces, I will use the code from my previous article on face detection. So if you have not read it, I encourage you to do so to understand how face detection works and its Python coding.
Before starting the actual coding we need to import the required modules for coding. So let's import them first.
#import OpenCV module
import cv2
#import os module for reading training data directories and paths
import os
#import numpy to convert python lists to numpy arrays as
#it is needed by OpenCV face recognizers
import numpy as np
#matplotlib for display our images
import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
%matplotlib inline
The more images used in training the better. Normally a lot of images are used for training a face recognizer so that it can learn different looks of the same person, for example with glasses, without glasses, laughing, sad, happy, crying, with beard, without beard etc. To keep our tutorial simple we are going to use only 12 images for each person.
So our training data consists of total 2 persons with 12 images of each person. All training data is inside training-data
folder. training-data
folder contains one folder for each person and each folder is named with format sLabel (e.g. s1, s2)
where label is actually the integer label assigned to that person. For example folder named s1 means that this folder contains images for person 1. The directory structure tree for training data is as follows:
training-data
|-------------- s1
| |-- 1.jpg
| |-- ...
| |-- 12.jpg
|-------------- s2
| |-- 1.jpg
| |-- ...
| |-- 12.jpg
The test-data
folder contains images that we will use to test our face recognizer after it has been successfully trained.
As OpenCV face recognizer accepts labels as integers so we need to define a mapping between integer labels and persons actual names so below I am defining a mapping of persons integer labels and their respective names.
Note: As we have not assigned label 0
to any person so the mapping for label 0 is empty.
#there is no label 0 in our training data so subject name for index/label 0 is empty
subjects = ["", "Tom Cruise", "Shahrukh Khan"]
You may be wondering why data preparation, right? Well, OpenCV face recognizer accepts data in a specific format. It accepts two vectors, one vector is of faces of all the persons and the second vector is of integer labels for each face so that when processing a face the face recognizer knows which person that particular face belongs too.
For example, if we had 2 persons and 2 images for each person.
PERSON-1 PERSON-2
img1 img1
img2 img2
Then the prepare data step will produce following face and label vectors.
FACES LABELS
person1_img1_face 1
person1_img2_face 1
person2_img1_face 2
person2_img2_face 2
Preparing data step can be further divided into following sub-steps.
s1, s2
.sLabel
where Label
is an integer representing the label we have assigned to that subject. So for example, folder name s1
means that the subject has label 1, s2 means subject label is 2 and so on. The label extracted in this step is assigned to each face detected in the next step.[There should be a visualization for above steps here]
Did you read my last article on face detection? No? Then you better do so right now because to detect faces, I am going to use the code from my previous article on face detection. So if you have not read it, I encourage you to do so to understand how face detection works and its coding. Below is the same code.
#function to detect face using OpenCV
def detect_face(img):
#convert the test image to gray image as opencv face detector expects gray images
gray = cv2.cvtColor(img, cv2.COLOR_BGR2GRAY)
#load OpenCV face detector, I am using LBP which is fast
#there is also a more accurate but slow Haar classifier
face_cascade = cv2.CascadeClassifier('opencv-files/lbpcascade_frontalface.xml')
#let's detect multiscale (some images may be closer to camera than others) images
#result is a list of faces
faces = face_cascade.detectMultiScale(gray, scaleFactor=1.2, minNeighbors=5);
#if no faces are detected then return original img
if (len(faces) == 0):
return None, None
#under the assumption that there will be only one face,
#extract the face area
(x, y, w, h) = faces[0]
#return only the face part of the image
return gray[y:y+w, x:x+h], faces[0]
I am using OpenCV's LBP face detector. On line 4, I convert the image to grayscale because most operations in OpenCV are performed in gray scale, then on line 8 I load LBP face detector using cv2.CascadeClassifier
class. After that on line 12 I use cv2.CascadeClassifier
class' detectMultiScale
method to detect all the faces in the image. on line 20, from detected faces I only pick the first face because in one image there will be only one face (under the assumption that there will be only one prominent face). As faces returned by detectMultiScale
method are actually rectangles (x, y, width, height) and not actual faces images so we have to extract face image area from the main image. So on line 23 I extract face area from gray image and return both the face image area and face rectangle.
Now you have got a face detector and you know the 4 steps to prepare the data, so are you ready to code the prepare data step? Yes? So let's do it.
#this function will read all persons' training images, detect face from each image
#and will return two lists of exactly same size, one list
# of faces and another list of labels for each face
def prepare_training_data(data_folder_path):
#------STEP-1--------
#get the directories (one directory for each subject) in data folder
dirs = os.listdir(data_folder_path)
#list to hold all subject faces
faces = []
#list to hold labels for all subjects
labels = []
#let's go through each directory and read images within it
for dir_name in dirs:
#our subject directories start with letter 's' so
#ignore any non-relevant directories if any
if not dir_name.startswith("s"):
continue;
#------STEP-2--------
#extract label number of subject from dir_name
#format of dir name = slabel
#, so removing letter 's' from dir_name will give us label
label = int(dir_name.replace("s", ""))
#build path of directory containin images for current subject subject
#sample subject_dir_path = "training-data/s1"
subject_dir_path = data_folder_path + "/" + dir_name
#get the images names that are inside the given subject directory
subject_images_names = os.listdir(subject_dir_path)
#------STEP-3--------
#go through each image name, read image,
#detect face and add face to list of faces
for image_name in subject_images_names:
#ignore system files like .DS_Store
if image_name.startswith("."):
continue;
#build image path
#sample image path = training-data/s1/1.pgm
image_path = subject_dir_path + "/" + image_name
#read image
image = cv2.imread(image_path)
#display an image window to show the image
cv2.imshow("Training on image...", image)
cv2.waitKey(100)
#detect face
face, rect = detect_face(image)
#------STEP-4--------
#for the purpose of this tutorial
#we will ignore faces that are not detected
if face is not None:
#add face to list of faces
faces.append(face)
#add label for this face
labels.append(label)
cv2.destroyAllWindows()
cv2.waitKey(1)
cv2.destroyAllWindows()
return faces, labels
I have defined a function that takes the path, where training subjects' folders are stored, as parameter. This function follows the same 4 prepare data substeps mentioned above.
(step-1) On line 8 I am using os.listdir
method to read names of all folders stored on path passed to function as parameter. On line 10-13 I am defining labels and faces vectors.
(step-2) After that I traverse through all subjects' folder names and from each subject's folder name on line 27 I am extracting the label information. As folder names follow the sLabel
naming convention so removing the letter s
from folder name will give us the label assigned to that subject.
(step-3) On line 34, I read all the images names of of the current subject being traversed and on line 39-66 I traverse those images one by one. On line 53-54 I am using OpenCV's imshow(window_title, image)
along with OpenCV's waitKey(interval)
method to display the current image being traveresed. The waitKey(interval)
method pauses the code flow for the given interval (milliseconds), I am using it with 100ms interval so that we can view the image window for 100ms. On line 57, I detect face from the current image being traversed.
(step-4) On line 62-66, I add the detected face and label to their respective vectors.
But a function can't do anything unless we call it on some data that it has to prepare, right? Don't worry, I have got data of two beautiful and famous celebrities. I am sure you will recognize them!
Let's call this function on images of these beautiful celebrities to prepare data for training of our Face Recognizer. Below is a simple code to do that.
#let's first prepare our training data
#data will be in two lists of same size
#one list will contain all the faces
#and other list will contain respective labels for each face
print("Preparing data...")
faces, labels = prepare_training_data("training-data")
print("Data prepared")
#print total faces and labels
print("Total faces: ", len(faces))
print("Total labels: ", len(labels))
Preparing data...
Data prepared
Total faces: 23
Total labels: 23
This was probably the boring part, right? Don't worry, the fun stuff is coming up next. It's time to train our own face recognizer so that once trained it can recognize new faces of the persons it was trained on. Read? Ok then let's train our face recognizer.
As we know, OpenCV comes equipped with three face recognizers.
cv2.face.createEigenFaceRecognizer()
cv2.face.createFisherFaceRecognizer()
cv2.face.LBPHFisherFaceRecognizer()
I am going to use LBPH face recognizer but you can use any face recognizer of your choice. No matter which of the OpenCV's face recognizer you use the code will remain the same. You just have to change one line, the face recognizer initialization line given below.
#create our LBPH face recognizer
face_recognizer = cv2.face.createLBPHFaceRecognizer()
#or use EigenFaceRecognizer by replacing above line with
#face_recognizer = cv2.face.createEigenFaceRecognizer()
#or use FisherFaceRecognizer by replacing above line with
#face_recognizer = cv2.face.createFisherFaceRecognizer()
Now that we have initialized our face recognizer and we also have prepared our training data, it's time to train the face recognizer. We will do that by calling the train(faces-vector, labels-vector)
method of face recognizer.
#train our face recognizer of our training faces
face_recognizer.train(faces, np.array(labels))
Did you notice that instead of passing labels
vector directly to face recognizer I am first converting it to numpy array? This is because OpenCV expects labels vector to be a numpy
array.
Still not satisfied? Want to see some action? Next step is the real action, I promise!
Now comes my favorite part, the prediction part. This is where we actually get to see if our algorithm is actually recognizing our trained subjects's faces or not. We will take two test images of our celeberities, detect faces from each of them and then pass those faces to our trained face recognizer to see if it recognizes them.
Below are some utility functions that we will use for drawing bounding box (rectangle) around face and putting celeberity name near the face bounding box.
#function to draw rectangle on image
#according to given (x, y) coordinates and
#given width and heigh
def draw_rectangle(img, rect):
(x, y, w, h) = rect
cv2.rectangle(img, (x, y), (x+w, y+h), (0, 255, 0), 2)
#function to draw text on give image starting from
#passed (x, y) coordinates.
def draw_text(img, text, x, y):
cv2.putText(img, text, (x, y), cv2.FONT_HERSHEY_PLAIN, 1.5, (0, 255, 0), 2)
First function draw_rectangle
draws a rectangle on image based on passed rectangle coordinates. It uses OpenCV's built in function cv2.rectangle(img, topLeftPoint, bottomRightPoint, rgbColor, lineWidth)
to draw rectangle. We will use it to draw a rectangle around the face detected in test image.
Second function draw_text
uses OpenCV's built in function cv2.putText(img, text, startPoint, font, fontSize, rgbColor, lineWidth)
to draw text on image.
Now that we have the drawing functions, we just need to call the face recognizer's predict(face)
method to test our face recognizer on test images. Following function does the prediction for us.
#this function recognizes the person in image passed
#and draws a rectangle around detected face with name of the
#subject
def predict(test_img):
#make a copy of the image as we don't want to chang original image
img = test_img.copy()
#detect face from the image
face, rect = detect_face(img)
#predict the image using our face recognizer
label= face_recognizer.predict(face)
#get name of respective label returned by face recognizer
label_text = subjects[label]
#draw a rectangle around face detected
draw_rectangle(img, rect)
#draw name of predicted person
draw_text(img, label_text, rect[0], rect[1]-5)
return img
predict(face)
method. This method will return a lableNow that we have the prediction function well defined, next step is to actually call this function on our test images and display those test images to see if our face recognizer correctly recognized them. So let's do it. This is what we have been waiting for.
print("Predicting images...")
#load test images
test_img1 = cv2.imread("test-data/test1.jpg")
test_img2 = cv2.imread("test-data/test2.jpg")
#perform a prediction
predicted_img1 = predict(test_img1)
predicted_img2 = predict(test_img2)
print("Prediction complete")
#create a figure of 2 plots (one for each test image)
f, (ax1, ax2) = plt.subplots(1, 2, figsize=(10, 5))
#display test image1 result
ax1.imshow(cv2.cvtColor(predicted_img1, cv2.COLOR_BGR2RGB))
#display test image2 result
ax2.imshow(cv2.cvtColor(predicted_img2, cv2.COLOR_BGR2RGB))
#display both images
cv2.imshow("Tom cruise test", predicted_img1)
cv2.imshow("Shahrukh Khan test", predicted_img2)
cv2.waitKey(0)
cv2.destroyAllWindows()
cv2.waitKey(1)
cv2.destroyAllWindows()
Predicting images...
Prediction complete
wohooo! Is'nt it beautiful? Indeed, it is!
Face Recognition is a fascinating idea to work on and OpenCV has made it extremely simple and easy for us to code it. It just takes a few lines of code to have a fully working face recognition application and we can switch between all three face recognizers with a single line of code change. It's that simple.
Although EigenFaces, FisherFaces and LBPH face recognizers are good but there are even better ways to perform face recognition like using Histogram of Oriented Gradients (HOGs) and Neural Networks. So the more advanced face recognition algorithms are now a days implemented using a combination of OpenCV and Machine learning. I have plans to write some articles on those more advanced methods as well, so stay tuned!
Download Details:
Author: informramiz
Source Code: https://github.com/informramiz/opencv-face-recognition-python
License: MIT License
1670266980
In this React tutorial, we will learn about the React List Example Tutorial: Display List in React. how to display a simple listing, listing with Array of Objects and nesting list in React.js. This article is mainly focused for developers who have started working on React.js.
Here, I am going to show how to display data of simple array having list of countries in it. we will use .map to render the item in the template.
import React from "react";
function App() {
const Countries = [
{ name: "USA" },
{ name: "India" },
{ name: "Australia" },
{ name: "Spain" },
{ name: "France" },
{ name: "Japan" }
];
return (
<ul>
{Countries.map((data) => (
<li>{data.name}</li>
))}
</ul>
);
}
export default App;
When you run the above code, you’ll be given a warning that a key should be provided for list items. A “key” is a special string attribute you need to include when creating lists of elements. Let;s have a look at the code below:
import React from "react";
function App() {
const Countries = [
{ name: "USA" },
{ name: "India" },
{ name: "Australia" },
{ name: "Spain" },
{ name: "France" },
{ name: "Japan" }
];
return (
<div>
<ul>
{Countries.map((data, index) => (
<li key={index}>{data.name}</li>
))}
</ul>
</div>
);
}
export default App;
If you have unique id key availalbe in the array, then that is best to use because that will help to do edit, delete, and other related operations on specific item.
To display array of object is also as simple as above we did. We have used the same .map method to get individual item and placed the individual value with the same way we do for accesing object item(using . operator). Let's have a look on below code:
import React from "react";
function App() {
const Users = [
{
id: "01",
name: "Leanne Graham",
email: "Sincere@april.biz",
zipcode: 12112
},
{
id: "02",
name: "Ervin Howell",
email: "Shanna@melissa.tv",
zipcode: 12111
}
];
return (
<ul>
{Users.map((data) => (
<li key={data.id}>
<p>{data.name}</p>
<p>{data.email}</p>
<p>{data.zipcode}</p>
</li>
))}
</ul>
);
}
export default App;
Sometimes we needed to show data in nested form. Here, we will how to display data in nested way
import React from 'react';
function App() {
const users = [
{
id: "01",
name: "Leanne Graham",
email: "Sincere@april.biz",
zipcode: 12112
},
{
id: "02",
name: "Ervin Howell",
email: "Shanna@melissa.tv",
zipcode: 12111
}
];
const finalArray = [users, users];
return (
<div>
<ul>
{finalArray.map((nestedItem, i) => (
<ul key={i}>
<h3> List {i} </h3>
{nestedItem.map(data => (
<li key={data.id}>
<div>{data.name}</div>
<div>{data.email}</div>
<div>{data.zipcode}</div>
</li>
))}
</ul>
))}
</ul>
</div>
);
}
export default App;
In this article, We learn about How to Display List in Reactjs Example
Original article sourced at: https://jsonworld.com