- Tesseract - Wikipedia
The tesseract is one of the six convex regular 4-polytopes The tesseract is also called an 8-cell, C8, (regular) octachoron, or cubic prism It is the four-dimensional measure polytope, taken as a unit for hypervolume [2] Coxeter labels it the γ4 polytope [3]
- Tesseract Open Source OCR Engine (main repository) - GitHub
Tesseract has unicode (UTF-8) support, and can recognize more than 100 languages "out of the box" Tesseract supports various image formats including PNG, JPEG and TIFF Tesseract supports various output formats: plain text, hOCR (HTML), PDF, invisible-text-only PDF, TSV, ALTO and PAGE
- Tesseract | Definition, Shape, Facts | Britannica
A tesseract, also called a hypercube, is a geometric shape that is the four-dimensional equivalent of a three-dimensional cube
- How to Install and Use Tesseract OCR on Windows - TheLinuxCode
In this post we covered everything from installing Tesseract OCR on Windows to using the CLI and Python bindings to extract text from images Tesseract is a versatile open source tool for developers wanting free OCR capability
- Introduction | tessdoc
Tesseract is an open source text recognition (OCR) Engine, available under the Apache 2 0 license It can be used directly, or (for programmers) using an API to extract printed text from images
- Tesseract | Brilliant Math Science Wiki
A tesseract is a four-dimensional closed figure with lines of equal length that meet each other at right angles Since we've added another dimension, four lines meet at each vertex at right angles
- Open Source OCR Engine • tesseract
Bindings to Tesseract: a powerful optical character recognition (OCR) engine that supports over 100 languages The engine is highly configurable in order to tune the detection algorithms and obtain the best possible results
- Tesseract (software) - Wikipedia
The Tesseract engine was originally developed as proprietary software at Hewlett-Packard labs in Bristol, England and Greeley, Colorado, United States between 1985 and 1994, with more changes made in 1996 to port to Windows, and partial migration from C to C++ in 1998
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