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Introduction to Computer Vision, Exercises

This repository contains code exercises and materials for Udacity's Introduction to Computer Vision program. It consists of tutorial notebooks that demonstrate, or challenge you to complete, various computer vision applications and techniques. These notebooks depend on a number of software packages to run, and so, we suggest that you create a local environment with these dependencies by following the instructions below.

Configure and Manage Your Environment with Anaconda

Per the Anaconda docs:

Conda is an open source package management system and environment management system for installing multiple versions of software packages and their dependencies and switching easily between them. It works on Linux, OS X and Windows, and was created for Python programs but can package and distribute any software.

Overview

Using Anaconda consists of the following:

  1. Install miniconda on your computer, by selecting the latest Python version for your operating system. If you already have conda or miniconda installed, you should be able to skip this step and move on to step 2.
  2. Create and activate * a new conda environment.

* Each time you wish to work on any exercises, activate your conda environment!


1. Installation

Download the latest version of miniconda that matches your system.

NOTE: There have been reports of issues creating an environment using miniconda v4.3.13. If it gives you issues try versions 4.3.11 or 4.2.12 from here.

Linux Mac Windows
64-bit 64-bit (bash installer) 64-bit (bash installer) 64-bit (exe installer)
32-bit 32-bit (bash installer) 32-bit (exe installer)

Install miniconda on your machine. Detailed instructions:

2. Create and Activate the Environment

For Windows users, these following commands need to be executed from the Anaconda prompt as opposed to a Windows terminal window. For Mac, a normal terminal window will work.

Git and version control

These instructions also assume you have git installed for working with Github from a terminal window, but if you do not, you can download that first with the command:

conda install git

If you'd like to learn more about version control and using git from the command line, take a look at our free course: Version Control with Git.

Now, we're ready to create our local environment!

  1. Clone the repository, and navigate to the downloaded folder. This may take a minute or two to clone due to the included image data.
git clone https://github.com/udacity/cd0360-Introduction-to-Computer-Vision.git
cd cd0360-Introduction-to-Computer-Vision
  1. Create (and activate) a new environment, named cv-nd with Python 3.6. If prompted to proceed with the install (Proceed [y]/n) type y.

    • Linux or Mac:
    conda create -n cv-nd python=3.6
    source activate cv-nd
    
    • Windows:
    conda create --name cv-nd python=3.6
    activate cv-nd
    

    At this point your command line should look something like: (cv-nd) <User>:cd0360-Introduction-to-Computer-Vision <user>$. The (cv-nd) indicates that your environment has been activated, and you can proceed with further package installations.

  2. Install PyTorch and torchvision; this should install the latest version of PyTorch.

    • Linux or Mac:
    conda install pytorch torchvision -c pytorch 
    
    • Windows:
    conda install pytorch-cpu -c pytorch
    pip install torchvision
    
  3. Install a few required pip packages, which are specified in the requirements text file (including OpenCV).

pip install -r requirements.txt
  1. That's it!

Now all of the cv-nd libraries are available to you. Assuming you're environment is still activated, you can navigate to the Exercises repo and start looking at the notebooks:

cd
cd cd0360-Introduction-to-Computer-Vision
jupyter notebook

To exit the environment when you have completed your work session, simply close the terminal window.

Notes on environment creation and deletion

Verify that the cv-nd environment was created in your environments:

conda info --envs

Cleanup downloaded libraries (remove tarballs, zip files, etc):

conda clean -tp

Uninstall the environment (if you want); you can remove it by name:

conda env remove -n cv-nd

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