Image rotation and NaN elements

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Sordin
Sordin on 6 Apr 2017
Edited: KSSV on 6 Apr 2017
The following code rotates an image by a given angle θ. I do not understand the function and significance of the last line:
n = size(Image,1);
x = linspace(-1,1,n);
[X1,Y1] = meshgrid(x,x);
% Coordinate rotation
X = cos(theta)*X1 + -sin(theta)*Y1;
Y = sin(theta)*X1 + cos(theta)*Y1;
% Interpolation
RotatedImage = interp2(X1,Y1,Image,X,Y);
RotatedImage(isnan(RotatedImage)) = 0;
If I understand correctly, it eliminates the elements in the final image that are NaN. But why would the rotation or interpolation introduce elements which are not-a-number?
When I omit this line, the resulting image looks nothing like the original image. Without this line, is there any alternative way of avoiding NaN elements?
Any explanation would be appreciated.

Accepted Answer

KSSV
KSSV on 6 Apr 2017
Edited: KSSV on 6 Apr 2017
RotatedImage = interp2(X1,Y1,Image,X,Y);
It introduces NaN's at the points, which are not in range. As it is not using extrapolation. So those NaN's are replaced with zeros. Read about interp2, how it is associated with extrapolation.

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