setcov(W, V=W, ...)"owin".as.mask
to control the pixel resolution."im") representing the
set covariance function of W,
or the cross-covariance of W and V. We may interpret $C(v)$ as the area of the set of
all points $x$ in $W$ such that $x+v$ also lies in
$W$.
This command computes a discretised approximation to
the set covariance function of any
plane region $W$ represented as a window object (of class
"owin", see owin.object). The return value is
a pixel image (object of class "im") whose greyscale values
are values of the set covariance function.
The set covariance is computed using the Fast Fourier Transform,
unless W is a rectangle, when an exact formula is used.
If the argument V is present, then setcov(W,V)
computes the set cross-covariance function $C(x)$
defined for each vector $x$
as the area of the intersection between $W$ and $V+x$.
imcov,
owin,
as.owin,
erosionw <- owin(c(0,1),c(0,1))
v <- setcov(w)
plot(v)Run the code above in your browser using DataLab