Installation Guide: Opencv 2.4 With Visual Studio C++ 2010
This document provides instructions for installing OpenCV 2.4 and configuring a Visual Studio C++ 2010 project to use it. It describes downloading and extracting OpenCV, editing environment variables to include OpenCV paths, configuring project properties to include OpenCV include and library directories, and adding OpenCV library dependencies. The document also provides a simple sample code to test the OpenCV installation loads and displays an image.
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Installation Guide: Opencv 2.4 With Visual Studio C++ 2010
This document provides instructions for installing OpenCV 2.4 and configuring a Visual Studio C++ 2010 project to use it. It describes downloading and extracting OpenCV, editing environment variables to include OpenCV paths, configuring project properties to include OpenCV include and library directories, and adding OpenCV library dependencies. The document also provides a simple sample code to test the OpenCV installation loads and displays an image.
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Installation guide: OpenCV 2.
4 with Visual Studio C++ 2010
After some trouble installing OpenCV 2.4 in Windows and using it with Visual C++ 2010, I decided to write a post about this, so I can hopefully save you some time figuring this one out. It is based on this wiki, but that describes how to build with CMake etc, which is not necessary (anymore?).
Okay, so first you need to download OpenCV 2.4 here. After downloading, you need to extract it. I have extracted it to "D:\OpenCV2.4.2\" and I will use this folder for the rest of this post, you can change it if you like.
Edit your PATH variable (right click on this computer, properties, then select the tab "advanced" and click on "Environment Variables", which is near the bottom).
Add these paths to your Path Variable: D:\OpenCV2.4.2\opencv\build\x86\vc10\bin D:\OpenCV2.4.2\opencv\build\common\tbb\ia32\vc10 Replace the beginning with your install path of course. It think that you would need to replace x86 in the first path with x64 and ia32 in the second path with intel64 if you want to build a 64 bit application, although I am not sure about this.
Now we are ready to create a project with OpenCV. In Visual C++ 2010, create a new Win32 console application called OpenCVTest. Now right click the project and select Properties.
On the left, choose C/C++ and edit the Additional Include Directories. Add these directories: D:\OpenCV2.4.2\opencv\build\include\opencv D:\OpenCV2.4.2\opencv\build\include
Now choose Linker and add this directory to the Additional Library Directories: D:\OpenCV2.4.2\opencv\build\x86\vc10\lib Again I think you need to replace x86 with x64 if you want to build a 64 bit application.
Now open the Linker group (press the + sign before it) and select Input. Add these lines to the Additional Dependencies: opencv_core242d.lib opencv_imgproc242d.lib opencv_highgui242d.lib opencv_ml242d.lib opencv_video242d.lib opencv_features2d242d.lib opencv_calib3d242d.lib opencv_objdetect242d.lib opencv_contrib242d.lib opencv_legacy242d.lib opencv_flann242d.lib Replace 242 with your version if you're not using 2.4.2. Easiest is to paste these lines in notepad, press CTRL+H and set it to find "242" and replace with "251" (would your version be 2.5.1 for example).
And this one cost me a couple of days to figure out: if you do a release build, please remove all the d's in the above filenames (so opencv_core242d.lib becomes opencv_core242.lib), otherwise it won't run properly!
Finally you're ready to use OpenCV. To test it, paste the following code in your OpenCVTest.cpp file:
return 0; } (Please replace D:\\funny.jpg with a valid path to an image! Also make sure that you use double backslashes in stead of one, this because the backslash is an escape character in C++.) Now press F5 and it should build and run!
Or, if you like to use the 2.x C++ style, you can also use: