Talk:Zhang-Suen thinning algorithm
Could someone help explain why, in the example image the following transformation occurs (in the periods separating the R and C, and after the C):
..... ..... .###. -> ..... .#?#. ..#.. ..... .....
Surely the the cell labelled '?' will be culled at step 1:
- It is black with 8 neighbours - B = 5 (2 <= 5 <= 6) - A = 1 - At least one of P2 P4 P6 is white (P6 is white) - At least one of P4 P6 P8 is white (P6 is white)
Why isn't it whitened at step 1?
--Tim-brown (talk) 17:33, 15 October 2013 (UTC)
- I expect that there are removals of some of those surrounding cells before it gets to your '?' cell which affects the final outcome. --Paddy3118 (talk) 18:54, 15 October 2013 (UTC)
- I'm considering what happens to this individual cell (not necessarily its neighbours). As far as I am concerned, the situation I describe above is the calculation for Step-1 of the first iteration. Nothing has changed (i.e. been removed) before this: all changes are stored, and applied `after` the analysis. So the step-1 rule should apply to cell '?'. And it should be blank (by my interpretation of the rules). But it ain't.