I am new at DirectShow, so some parts of this library i don\'t understand well. I already see the example DxSnap, but i need to capture frames without previewing it
If your main concern is "access webcam" and not "access webcam with DirectShow", then I would have a look at the AForge.NET-Framework. I tried it with DirectShow once just to find out that I could do the same thing with multiple video sources in less time with less code.
Here is some sample code: Access to USB cameras and video files using DirectShow
Here is an example. Construct a Windows Form as shown in the picture.
Click this link to see how the WinForm looks
These names let us associate the event handlers (code below) with the respective control.
If the program is built successfully and run, use the combobox to select an available source. Click "Start" to see video feed. Click "Copy" to clone the image onto the clipboard. Click "Stop" to close the image feed.
The code was tested using Microsoft:
To build the code, the project containing this code needs to have these References:
The packages can be pulled into the project by NuGet. In Visual Studio IDE:
Search for "AForge" and install the respective packages.
Code:
using System;
using System.Drawing;
using System.Windows.Forms;
using CameraDevice;
using AForge.Video.DirectShow;
using System.Threading;
namespace CameraCaptureTest3
{
public partial class Form1 : Form
{
CameraImaging camImg;
bool StopVideo = true;
Thread thrVideo;
object mImageLock;
FilterInfoCollection videoDevices;
public Form1()
{
InitializeComponent();
camImg = new CameraImaging();
mImageLock = new object();
// enumerate video devices
videoDevices = new FilterInfoCollection(FilterCategory.VideoInputDevice);
cbCameraDevices.Items.Clear();
foreach(FilterInfo i in videoDevices) cbCameraDevices.Items.Add(i.Name);
}
//---------------------------------------------------------
// VideoRecordin() is meant to be run on a separate thread
//---------------------------------------------------------
private void VideoRecording()
{
camImg.videoSource.Start();
while (!StopVideo)
{
lock (mImageLock)
{
Bitmap tmp = (Bitmap)camImg.bitmap.Clone();
if (InvokeRequired)
{
BeginInvoke(new MethodInvoker(() =>
{
pictureBox1.Image = tmp;
pictureBox1.Invalidate();
}));
}
else
{
pictureBox1.Image = tmp;
pictureBox1.Invalidate();
}
}
Thread.Sleep(33);
}
camImg.videoSource.Stop();
}
private void btnStartVideo_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
StopVideo = false;
try
{
camImg.videoSource = new VideoCaptureDevice(camImg.videoDevices[cbCameraDevices.SelectedIndex].MonikerString);
thrVideo = new Thread(VideoRecording);
thrVideo.Start();
Thread.Sleep(1000);
lblRecording.Visible = true;
}
catch (Exception)
{
MessageBox.Show("No camera is chosen.", "Exception", MessageBoxButtons.OK, MessageBoxIcon.Exclamation);
}
}
private void Form1_FormClosing(object sender, FormClosingEventArgs e)
{
StopVideo = true;
if (thrVideo != null) thrVideo.Join();
lblRecording.Visible = false;
Application.DoEvents();
}
private void button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
StopVideo = true;
if (thrVideo != null)
while (thrVideo.ThreadState == ThreadState.Running)
Application.DoEvents();
pictureBox1.Image = null;
lblRecording.Visible = false;
}
private void button2_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Clipboard.SetImage(pictureBox1.Image);
}
}
}
you could build one yourself. If you look into the windows sdk 7.0~ folders you can go to samples > multimedia > directshow > and there should be a filters folder that shows you how to make generic filters and do w/e you want