Page 1 of 1

brighten a point cloud

Posted: Wed Mar 06, 2019 2:16 pm
by wgrimes
I have a point cloud that someone else prepared and it comes in extremely dark. I can change the display settings and brighten it when in CC, but when I export to .pts file it seems to become dark again. There is no color, I just have intensity...so I'm use grey scale.

How can I apply a permanent 'brighten' to the point cloud??

Re: brighten a point cloud

Posted: Sat Mar 09, 2019 6:25 pm
by Aarie
Hi,
afaik this is not possible in Cloudcompare. Daniel, any chance it might be supported in future?
But you can do this in Meshlab. Under "Filters - Color Creation and Processing" you have various filters for brightness, contrast, white-balance etc.
Cheers!
Arie

Re: brighten a point cloud

Posted: Tue Mar 12, 2019 5:46 am
by daniel
Sorry for the late answer: you should check the 'Levels' tool: https://www.cloudcompare.org/doc/wiki/i ... s%5CLevels (fixed link)

Re: brighten a point cloud

Posted: Mon Mar 18, 2019 10:57 am
by Aarie
Hi Daniel,
I don't quite understand what the level tool (or the linked zoom tool) has to do with manipulating the scalar values?

Have you considered implementing color manipulation features for pointclouds (similar to those in Meshlab)? It would seem that this would be a quite useful feature for a software dedicated to pointclouds. ;)
Unbenannt.jpg
Unbenannt.jpg (20.03 KiB) Viewed 15715 times

Re: brighten a point cloud

Posted: Mon Mar 18, 2019 4:42 pm
by daniel
Sorry I fixed the link above ;)

And I read the original message too fast, I thought it was a color issue. If it's a scalar field issue, then changing the display parameters in CloudCompare won't actually change the intensity values indeed. Therefore once exported, the values won't change...

To change the values, you would have to use the 'SF Arithmetic' tool: https://www.cloudcompare.org/doc/wiki/i ... Arithmetic

You can for instance multiply the scalar values by a constant value (X2, X3, etc.)

And apart from the 'Level' tool, we don't have much tools to modify the colors. But of course, anyone motivated can do it as it's an open source tool ;)

Re: brighten a point cloud

Posted: Mon Mar 18, 2019 10:17 pm
by Aarie
Thanks for the info!
Cheers