README.md DEVICES.md FORMATS.md FRAME_PROCESSORS.md ANIMATED.md ERRORS.md


Formats

### What are camera formats? Each camera device (see [DEVICES.md](./DEVICES.md)) provides a number of capture formats that have different specifications. There are formats specifically designed for high-resolution photo capture, which have very high photo output quality but in return only support frame-rates of up to 30 FPS. On the other side, there might be formats that are designed for slow-motion video capture which have frame-rates up to 240 FPS. ### What if I don't want to choose a format? If you don't want to specify the best format for your camera device, you don't have to. The Camera _automatically chooses the best matching format_ for the current camera device. This is why the Camera's `format` property is _optional_. If you don't want to do a lot of filtering, but still want to let the camera know what your intentions are, you can use the Camera's `preset` property. (🔗 See the [CameraPreset.ts](../src/CameraPreset.ts) type for more information about presets) For example, use the `'medium'` preset if you want to create a video-chat application that shouldn't excessively use mobile data: ```tsx function App() { const devices = useCameraDevices() const device = devices.back return ( ) } ``` ### What you need to know about cameras To understand a bit more about camera formats, you first need to understand a few "general camera basics": * Each camera device is built differently, e.g. _Telephoto devices_ often don't provide frame-rates as high as _Wide-Angle devices_. * Formats are designed for specific use-cases, so formats with high resolution photo output don't support frame-rates as high as formats with lower resolution. * Different formats provide different field-of-views (FOV), maximum zoom factors, color spaces (iOS only), resolutions, frame rate ranges, and systems to assist with capture (auto-focus systems, video stabilization systems, ...) ### Get started Each application has different needs, so the format filtering is up to you. To get all available formats, simply use the `CameraDevice`'s `.formats` property. See how to get a camera device in the [DEVICES.md](./DEVICES.md) doc. > Note: You can also manually get all camera devices and decide which device to use based on the available `formats`. In fact, this is how we do it in the [Cuvent](https://cuvent.com) app. This example shows how you would pick the format with the _highest frame rate_: ```tsx function getMaxFps(format: CameraDeviceFormat): number { return format.frameRateRanges.reduce((prev, curr) => { if (curr.maxFrameRate > prev) return curr.maxFrameRate; else return prev; }, 0); } function App() { const devices = useCameraDevices('wide-angle-camera') const device = devices.back const format = useMemo(() => { return device?.formats.reduce((prev, curr) => { if (prev == null) return curr; if (getMaxFps(curr) > getMaxFps(prev)) return curr; else return prev; }, undefined); }, [device?.formats]); return ( ) } ``` Note that you don't want to simply pick the highest frame rate, as those formats often have incredibly low resolutions. You want to find a balance between high frame rate and high resolution, so instead you might want to use the `.sort` function. ### Sort To sort your formats, create a custom comparator function which will be used as the `.sort` function's argument. The custom comparator then compares formats, preferring ones with higher frame rate AND higher resolution. Implement this however you want, I personally use a "point-based system": ```ts export const sortFormatsByResolution = (left: CameraDeviceFormat, right: CameraDeviceFormat): number => { // in this case, points aren't "normalized" (e.g. higher resolution = 1 point, lower resolution = -1 points) let leftPoints = left.photoHeight * left.photoWidth; let rightPoints = right.photoHeight * right.photoWidth; if (left.videoHeight != null && left.videoWidth != null && right.videoHeight != null && right.videoWidth != null) { leftPoints += left.videoWidth * left.videoHeight; rightPoints += right.videoWidth * right.videoHeight; } // you can also add points for FPS, etc return rightPoints - leftPoints; }; // and then call it: const formats = useMemo(() => device?.formats.sort(sortFormatsByResolution), [device?.formats]) ``` Be careful that you don't `filter` out a lot of formats since you might end up having no format to use at all. (_Remember; not all devices support e.g. 240 FPS._) Always sort them and pick the best format, that way you are guaranteed to have a format available, even if your desired specifications aren't fully met. ### Props The `Camera` View provides a few props that depend on the specified `format`. For example, you can only set the `fps` prop to a value that is supported by the current `format`. So if you have a format that supports 240 FPS, you can set the `fps` to `240`: ```tsx function App() { return ( ) } ``` > Note: You should always verify that the format supports the desired FPS, and fall back to `undefined` (or a value that is supported, like `30`) if it doesn't. Other props that depend on the `format`: * `hdr`: Enables HDR photo or video capture and preview * `lowLightBoost`: Enables a night-mode/low-light-boost for photo or video capture and preview * `colorSpace`: Uses the specified color-space for photo or video capture and preview (iOS only since Android only uses `YUV`)