Following are the screenshots when using texture view in camera2 apis.In full screen the preview stretches,but it works when using lower resolution(second image). How to use thi
Below answer assumes you are in portrait mode only.
Your question is
How to use the preview in full-screen without stretching it
Let's break it down to 2 things:
First you need to know that this is logically impossible without crop, if your device's viewport has a different aspect ratio with any available resolution the camera provides.
So I would assume you accept cropping the preview.
StreamConfigurationMap map = mCameraCharacteristics.get(
CameraCharacteristics.SCALER_STREAM_CONFIGURATION_MAP);
if (map == null) {
throw new IllegalStateException("Failed to get configuration map: " + mCameraId);
}
Size[] sizes = map.getOutputSizes(SurfaceTexture.class);
Now you get a list of available resolutions (Sizes) of your device's camera.
The idea is to loop the sizes and see which one best fits. You probably need to write your own implementation of "best fits".
I am not going to provide any code here since what I have is quite different from your use case. But ideally, it should be something like this:
Size findBestSize (Size[] sizes) {
//Logic goes here
}
//...
textureView.setBufferSize(bestSize.getWidth(), bestSize.getHeight());
Surface surface = textureView.getSurface();
try {
mPreviewRequestBuilder = mCamera.createCaptureRequest(CameraDevice.TEMPLATE_PREVIEW);
mPreviewRequestBuilder.addTarget(surface);
mCamera.createCaptureSession(Arrays.asList(surface, mImageReader.getSurface()),
mSessionCallback, null);
} catch (final Exception e) {
//...
}
This is then nothing related to the Camera2 API. We "crop" the preview by letting the SurfaceView
/ TextureView
extends beyond device's viewport.
First place your SurfaceView
or TextureView
in a RelativeLayout
.
Use the below to extend it beyond the screen, after you get the aspect ratio from step 2.
Note that in this case you probably need to know this aspect ratio before you even start the camera.
//Suppose this value is obtained from Step 2.
//I simply test here by hardcoding a 3:4 aspect ratio, where my phone has a thinner aspect ratio.
float cameraAspectRatio = (float) 0.75;
//Preparation
DisplayMetrics metrics = new DisplayMetrics();
getWindowManager().getDefaultDisplay().getMetrics(metrics);
int screenWidth = metrics.widthPixels;
int screenHeight = metrics.heightPixels;
int finalWidth = screenWidth;
int finalHeight = screenHeight;
int widthDifference = 0;
int heightDifference = 0;
float screenAspectRatio = (float) screenWidth / screenHeight;
//Determines whether we crop width or crop height
if (screenAspectRatio > cameraAspectRatio) { //Keep width crop height
finalHeight = (int) (screenWidth / cameraAspectRatio);
heightDifference = finalHeight - screenHeight;
} else { //Keep height crop width
finalWidth = (int) (screenHeight * cameraAspectRatio);
widthDifference = finalWidth - screenWidth;
}
//Apply the result to the Preview
RelativeLayout.LayoutParams lp = (RelativeLayout.LayoutParams) cameraView.getLayoutParams();
lp.width = finalWidth;
lp.height = finalHeight;
//Below 2 lines are to center the preview, since cropping default occurs at the right and bottom
lp.leftMargin = - (widthDifference / 2);
lp.topMargin = - (heightDifference / 2);
cameraView.setLayoutParams(lp);
If you don't care about the result of Step 2, you can actually ignore Step 1 to Step 3 and simply use a library out there, as long as you can configure its aspect ratio. (It looks like this one is the best, but I haven't tried yet)
I have tested using my forked library. Without modifying any code of my library, I managed to make the preview fullscreen just by using Step 4:
Before using Step 4:
After using Step 4:
And the preview just after taking a photo will not distort as well, because the preview is also extending beyond your screen.
But the output image will include area that you cannot see in the preview, which makes perfect sense.
The code of Step 1 to Step 3 are generally referenced from Google's CameraView.