بدون توضیح

Kentaro Wada 1d1ba7007a Refactor LICENSE year part 1 سال پیش
.github a38ad73684 Update .github/workflows/release.yml 1 سال پیش
examples d1b8a22adc Enable "I" in ruff.toml 1 سال پیش
labelme 3a1f655407 Remove a duplicate statement 1 سال پیش
tests 82dc203f40 Update util.py 1 سال پیش
.flake8 a5cca50965 Improve .flake8 to ignore all of the hidden files 2 سال پیش
.gitignore 4ab0e9a7c7 Minor fix 5 سال پیش
.gitmodules 745f37ee47 Remove github2pypi and project cleanup 3 سال پیش
CITATION.cff 03236ae92e Add CITATION.cff 3 سال پیش
LICENSE 1d1ba7007a Refactor LICENSE year part 1 سال پیش
MANIFEST.in 9962d0adbf rst to md 9 سال پیش
Makefile ca07cccb3b Add Makefile 1 سال پیش
README.md 7abb6aa756 Update links of Starter Guide 1 سال پیش
labelme.desktop 6c08880336 Create labelme.desktop 5 سال پیش
labelme.spec aee5c5501d fix(i18n): add qm files to runtime 1 سال پیش
pytest.ini 03d678fb1a Add pytest.ini 2 سال پیش
requirements-dev.txt 8eb9acf4d6 Use ruff==0.1.9 in CI 1 سال پیش
ruff.toml b0e9b453b4 Enable Pyflakes "F" 1 سال پیش
setup.py bac7d669fc Stop using emoji that can cause encoding issue on Windows 1 سال پیش

README.md


labelme

Image Polygonal Annotation with Python


Description

Labelme is a graphical image annotation tool inspired by http://labelme.csail.mit.edu.
It is written in Python and uses Qt for its graphical interface.


VOC dataset example of instance segmentation.


Other examples (semantic segmentation, bbox detection, and classification).


Various primitives (polygon, rectangle, circle, line, and point).

Features

Starter Guide

If you're new to Labelme, you can get started with Labelme Starter Guide (FREE), which contains:

  • Installation guides for all platforms: Windows, macOS, and Linux 💻
  • Step-by-step tutorials: first annotation to editing, exporting, and integrating with other programs 📕
  • A compilation of valuable resources for further exploration 🔗.

Installation

There are options:

Anaconda

You need install Anaconda, then run below:

# python3
conda create --name=labelme python=3
source activate labelme
# conda install -c conda-forge pyside2
# conda install pyqt
# pip install pyqt5  # pyqt5 can be installed via pip on python3
pip install labelme
# or you can install everything by conda command
# conda install labelme -c conda-forge

Ubuntu

sudo apt-get install labelme

# or
sudo pip3 install labelme

# or install standalone executable from:
# https://github.com/wkentaro/labelme/releases

macOS

brew install pyqt  # maybe pyqt5
pip install labelme

# or
brew install wkentaro/labelme/labelme  # command line interface
# brew install --cask wkentaro/labelme/labelme  # app

# or install standalone executable/app from:
# https://github.com/wkentaro/labelme/releases

Windows

Install Anaconda, then in an Anaconda Prompt run:

conda create --name=labelme python=3
conda activate labelme
pip install labelme

# or install standalone executable/app from:
# https://github.com/wkentaro/labelme/releases

Usage

Run labelme --help for detail.
The annotations are saved as a JSON file.

labelme  # just open gui

# tutorial (single image example)
cd examples/tutorial
labelme apc2016_obj3.jpg  # specify image file
labelme apc2016_obj3.jpg -O apc2016_obj3.json  # close window after the save
labelme apc2016_obj3.jpg --nodata  # not include image data but relative image path in JSON file
labelme apc2016_obj3.jpg \
  --labels highland_6539_self_stick_notes,mead_index_cards,kong_air_dog_squeakair_tennis_ball  # specify label list

# semantic segmentation example
cd examples/semantic_segmentation
labelme data_annotated/  # Open directory to annotate all images in it
labelme data_annotated/ --labels labels.txt  # specify label list with a file

Command Line Arguments

  • --output specifies the location that annotations will be written to. If the location ends with .json, a single annotation will be written to this file. Only one image can be annotated if a location is specified with .json. If the location does not end with .json, the program will assume it is a directory. Annotations will be stored in this directory with a name that corresponds to the image that the annotation was made on.
  • The first time you run labelme, it will create a config file in ~/.labelmerc. You can edit this file and the changes will be applied the next time that you launch labelme. If you would prefer to use a config file from another location, you can specify this file with the --config flag.
  • Without the --nosortlabels flag, the program will list labels in alphabetical order. When the program is run with this flag, it will display labels in the order that they are provided.
  • Flags are assigned to an entire image. Example
  • Labels are assigned to a single polygon. Example

FAQ

Examples

How to develop

git clone https://github.com/wkentaro/labelme.git
cd labelme

# Install anaconda3 and labelme
curl -L https://github.com/wkentaro/dotfiles/raw/main/local/bin/install_anaconda3.sh | bash -s .
source .anaconda3/bin/activate
pip install -e .

How to build standalone executable

Below shows how to build the standalone executable on macOS, Linux and Windows.

# Setup conda
conda create --name labelme python=3.9
conda activate labelme

# Build the standalone executable
pip install .
pip install 'matplotlib<3.3'
pip install pyinstaller
pyinstaller labelme.spec
dist/labelme --version

How to contribute

Make sure below test passes on your environment.
See .github/workflows/ci.yml for more detail.

pip install -r requirements-dev.txt

ruff format --check  # `ruff format` to auto-fix
ruff check  # `ruff check --fix` to auto-fix
MPLBACKEND='agg' pytest -vsx tests/

Acknowledgement

This repo is the fork of mpitid/pylabelme.