Camera API in Android is hard. Having 2 different API for new and old Camera does not make things any easier. But fret not, that is your lucky day! After several years of working with Camera, we came up with Fotoapparat.
What it provides:
- Camera API which does not allow you to shoot yourself in the foot.
- Simple yet powerful parameters customization.
- Standalone custom
CameraView
which can be integrated into anyActivity
. - Fixes and workarounds for device-specific problems.
- Both Kotlin and Java friendly configurations.
- Last, but not least, non 0% test coverage.
Taking picture becomes as simple as:
val fotoapparat = Fotoapparat(
context = this,
view = cameraView
)
fotoapparat.start()
fotoapparat
.takePicture()
.saveToFile(someFile)
Add CameraView
to your layout
<io.fotoapparat.view.CameraView
android:id="@+id/camera_view"
android:layout_width="match_parent"
android:layout_height="match_parent"/>
Configure Fotoapparat
instance.
Fotoapparat(
context = this,
view = cameraView, // view which will draw the camera preview
scaleType = ScaleType.CenterCrop, // (optional) we want the preview to fill the view
lensPosition = back(), // (optional) we want back camera
cameraConfiguration = configuration, // (optional) define an advanced configuration
logger = loggers( // (optional) we want to log camera events in 2 places at once
logcat(), // ... in logcat
fileLogger(this) // ... and to file
),
cameraErrorCallback = { error -> } // (optional) log fatal errors
)
Check the wiki for the configuration
options e.g. change iso
Are you using Java only? See our wiki for the java-friendly configuration.
Call start()
and stop()
. No rocket science here.
override fun onStart() {
super.onStart()
fotoapparat.start()
}
override fun onStop() {
super.onStop()
fotoapparat.stop()
}
Finally, we are ready to take a picture. You have various options.
val photoResult = fotoapparat.takePicture()
// Asynchronously saves photo to file
photoResult.saveToFile(someFile)
// Asynchronously converts photo to bitmap and returns the result on the main thread
photoResult
.toBitmap()
.whenAvailable { bitmapPhoto ->
val imageView = (ImageView) findViewById(R.id.result)
imageView.setImageBitmap(bitmapPhoto.bitmap)
imageView.setRotation(-bitmapPhoto.rotationDegrees)
}
// Of course, you can also get a photo in a blocking way. Do not do it on the main thread though.
val result = photoResult.toBitmap().await()
// Convert asynchronous events to RxJava 1.x/2.x types.
// See /fotoapparat-adapters/ module
photoResult
.toBitmap()
.toSingle()
.subscribe { bitmapPhoto ->
}
It is also possible to update some parameters after Fotoapparat
was already started.
fotoapparat.updateConfiguration(
UpdateConfiguration(
flashMode = if (isChecked) torch() else off()
// ...
// all the parameters available in CameraConfiguration
)
)
Or alternatively, you may provide updates on an existing full configuration.
val configuration = CameraConfiguration(
// A full configuration
// ...
)
fotoapparat.updateConfiguration(
configuration.copy(
flashMode = if (isChecked) torch() else off()
// all the parameters available in CameraConfiguration
)
)
In order to switch between cameras, Fotoapparat.switchTo()
can be used with the new desired lensPosition
and its cameraConfiguration
.
fotoapparat.switchTo(
lensPosition = front(),
cameraConfiguration = newConfigurationForFrontCamera
)
Add dependency to your build.gradle
repositories {
maven { url 'https://jitpack.io' }
}
implementation 'io.fotoapparat.fotoapparat:library:2.2.0'
Camera permission will be automatically added to your AndroidManifest.xml
. Do not forget to request this permission on Marshmallow and higher.
If you like to test and try the latest added features & bugfixes you can use the -SNAPSHOT
version.
Gradle will download & cache the latest snapshot version, so be sure to delete the cache if you want to try a newer snapshot
version than the downloaded/cached one.
implementation 'io.fotoapparat:fotoapparat:library:-SNAPSHOT'
Optionally, you can check out our other library which adds face detection capabilities - FaceDetector.
For video recording possibility, check out our premium library - Videoapparat
We want to say thanks to Mark Murphy for the awesome job he did with CWAC-Camera. We were using his library for a couple of years and now we feel that Fotoapparat is a next step in the right direction.
We also want to say many thanks to Leander Lenzing for the amazing icon. Don't forget to follow his work in dribbble.
Copyright 2017 Fotoapparat
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.