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The color of each pixel in an image is specified by a combination of three values: red, green, and blue. These values typically take 256 levels, leading to 256^3 ~ 17 million possible colors.
In this GUI you can set a threshold value for each channel (R/G/B). If the color is above the threshold, it takes the maximum value (255); if not, it takes the minimum value (0). This "all or nothing" approach means that each color channel has only two possible levels, resulting in only 2^3 = 8 colors.
Hence, each of the 17 million possible colors is "rounded" to one of: red, green, blue, cyan, yellow, magenta, black, and white.
The result is an effect reminiscent of Andy Warhol's iconic celebrity paintings.
Cite As
Matt Tearle (2026). The Warholer (https://uk.mathworks.com/matlabcentral/fileexchange/37816-the-warholer), MATLAB Central File Exchange. Retrieved .
General Information
- Version 1.4.0.1 (89.6 KB)
MATLAB Release Compatibility
- Compatible with any release
Platform Compatibility
- Windows
- macOS
- Linux
