Questions about API usage are on-topic. However, your specific question was/is not on-topic, because of the specifics of the question, not a general moratorium on asking questions about APIs.
Personally, I voted to close as unclear/too broad because you didn't define what you meant by some of the things you stated in the Question, nor what results you actually wanted for each input. Importantly, your self-answer didn't fully answer the Question, as I understood it. The fact that you added that Answer indicated there was a disconnect between what you wrote in the Question and what you were actually looking for when asking your question. I don't remember which of "too broad" or "unclear" that I actually voted, but I felt that both could fit. [Note: this is the version which was closed.]
Self-answered questions must be sufficiently clear and contain enough information such that others who are familiar with the technology used can A) see that the self-answer does, in fact, completely answer the question, and B) could come up with an Answer which answers the question (i.e. satisfies the OP). The self-answer defines what the OP believes to be acceptable as an answer. IMO, the Answer you posted did not fully answer the Question as it was written (or as it's written as I post this). That confirms the question is unclear/too broad and must be narrowed/clarified, such that the self-answer is a complete answer to the question.
The issues with the question
Clarity
You provided 3 input images and asked for all three how to use the API "to detect if a head is completely inside an image or cut off by the image frame". This implies that you want to know A) if there is a head in the image and B) if that head is entirely in the frame. To me this means that you are looking for the results:
image head? is entirely in frame
1 true true
2 true false
3 true false
If that is not what you expected to get, then you needed to define what you mean by a head being in the image and/or what a cut-off head is.
Too broad
It's not clear to me that the API can accomplish the detection that there is a head and that it's cut-off for image 3. The probable complexity of doing that puts this out of the range of an SO answer.
The question doesn't define if it's only looking for an answer to these specific images, or something that's more generalized. Perhaps it could narrow this down by just saying that it's asking only about images which the API actually detects as having a head. However, it doesn't do that, and specifically includes an example which has a head that's cut-off which is supposed to be detected as a cut-off head, but for which the API doesn't even detect the existence of the head.
The question, at the time of closure, is basically asking someone to code up the entirety of this project to provide the above results. While that might be possible in a SO answer, it makes a much better question to break the problem into the various sub-tasks that are needed to solve the problem and ask separately about each of those sub-tasks, because those are at the level which can be reusable pieces that others can benefit from.
Answer confirms question is unclear/too broad
Your answer shows only results from the API for image 1 and image 2 with image 3 greyed out. Thus, the results you were showing indicated that, for image 3, the API did not detect A) that there was a head in the frame, which was required by the question, as written.
For image 3 you state a conclusion that is unjustified by the results that you are showing. You state "the API does not result any faceAnnotations
, so it can be easily detected as a substantially cropped-off head." From what you've shown, based on the results from the API, there is no justification to believe that there is a head at all in the image. It could be a picture of a garbage truck and get the same non-results. Thus, "easily detected as a substantially cropped-off head" is clearly a false conclusion/assumption.
If this was not a self-answer:
- I would have just assumed that it was a poor/incomplete answer.
- I would have commented on the answer asking the author to address the above issues, and potentially others.
Self-answers reflect on the quality/completeness of the Question
Because it was a self-answer, it reflects even more on the Question than an answer from some other person. By posting the self-answer, an OP has basically defined what they feel is an answer to the question which they actually intended to ask. Because this self-answer does not answer the Question as I understand the Question, it's clear that the Question which was written was not the question which the OP is actually asking. This confirms that the question is either unclear or too broad.
:-)
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