Dear Eduardo.
On 05/14/2012 07:53 PM, Eduardo Basterrechea wrote:
> I read the web, but I can't find info about if you use linguistics data
> in OCR, and if you can OCR spanish texts.
>
> Thanks for the project it seems to be a great product !
Thanks for your interest in our project!
Regarding the Scribo module, its main task is to detect and extract
structure and data in documents.
We perform image processing treatments on images and try to OCR detected
text regions. For OCR, we use the open source project Tesseract which
supports many languages, including Spanish.
In Scribo, functions calling the OCR let the user choose which language
to use for recognition. For Spanish you shall have to use "spa" as argument.
For the moment, we do not use any other linguistics data in OCR such as
dictionnary or semantic post-processing to improve results.
Let us know if you need more information.
Best regards,
--
Guillaume
Dear Cristián,
On 11/30/2011 01:57 AM, Cristián Canivell Gutiérrez (UPM) wrote:
> The definition of geom::min/max_row/col its that it gives you the image
> limits, so I should get lena's image in a chess pattern.
> Strangely as it may look, it happens to not fill the right and bottom
> edges as you can see in the picture:
>
> image.png
>
> I think there is something wrong in the tutorial as the loop should have
> as upper limit row/col *<=* geom::max_row/col instead of *=*
Sorry for the late answer but thanks for your report!
Indeed, this is an obvious mistake... '=' should be replaced by '<=' in
the loop as you noticed.
It will be fixed in the next issue of the documentation.
geom::max_{row,col}() functions returns the maximum {row,col} index
which should be included in the browsing.
Thanks again.
Best regards,
-- Guillaume
Dear Cristián,
On 11/30/2011 01:57 AM, Cristián Canivell Gutiérrez (UPM) wrote:
> The definition of geom::min/max_row/col its that it gives you the image
> limits, so I should get lena's image in a chess pattern.
> Strangely as it may look, it happens to not fill the right and bottom
> edges as you can see in the picture:
>
> image.png
>
> I think there is something wrong in the tutorial as the loop should have
> as upper limit row/col *<=* geom::max_row/col instead of *=*
Sorry for the late answer but thanks for your report!
Indeed, this is an obvious mistake... '=' should be replaced by '<=' in
the loop as you noticed.
It will be fixed in the next issue of the documentation.
geom::max_{row,col}() functions returns the maximum {row,col} index
which should be included in the browsing.
Thanks again.
Best regards,
--
Guillaume
Hello,
Unfortunately your package "olena" was rejected because of the following
reason:
You are not uploading to one of those Debian distributions: oldstable stable unstable experimental stable-backports oldstable-backports oldstable-backports-sloppy oldstable-security stable-security testing-security stable-proposed-updates testing-proposed-updates sid wheezy squeeze lenny squeeze-backports lenny-backports lenny-security lenny-backports-sloppy lenny-volatile squeeze-security squeeze-updates wheezy-security unreleased
Please try to fix it and re-upload. Thanks,
--
mentors.debian.net
Hello,
Unfortunately your package "olena" was rejected because of the following
reason:
Couldn't find user olena(a)lrde.epita.fr. Exiting.
Please try to fix it and re-upload. Thanks,
--
mentors.debian.net