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Barcode-Scanning-with-MLKIT

Showcase of barcode scanning using Google MLKIT and CameraX

📕 Dependencies

// View Binding
implementation("com.github.yogacp:android-viewbinding:1.0.4")

// Camera API
implementation("androidx.camera:camera-camera2:1.2.1")
implementation("androidx.camera:camera-lifecycle:1.2.1")
implementation("androidx.camera:camera-view:1.2.1")

// MLKit
implementation("com.google.mlkit:barcode-scanning:17.0.3")

Forgive me im lazy, so im just do some shortcut on viewbinding by using this library.

⚙ Manifest

<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.FLASHLIGHT" />
<uses-permission android:name="android.permission.CAMERA" />
<uses-feature android:name="android.hardware.camera.any" />



<application
    ....
    
    <activity android:name=".CamActivity"
              android:exported="false"/>
    
</application>

And just copy

  • CamActivity
  • Image Convertor
  • BarcodeAnalyzer

⚠️ ️Update (19/10/2022) ⚠️

There is a bug that will cause a crash when you start the app, apparently the preview is only able to show on Android Emulator but not on a real device.
So if you want adjust the scan box size or customize the box please do it on emulator.
DO NOT PASS THE IMAGE OUT FROM BARCODEANALYZER.
Preview Version

🏃‍♂️ How to start

binding.btnStart.setOnClickListener {
    val i = Intent(this, CamActivity::class.java)
    i.putExtra("title", "Example")
    i.putExtra("msg", "Scan Barcode")
    getContent.launch(i)
}

How you get your result

private val getContent =
    registerForActivityResult(ActivityResultContracts.StartActivityForResult()) {
        if (it.resultCode == Activity.RESULT_OK) {
            val barcode = it?.data?.getStringExtra("BarcodeResult")
            
            //In Android Emulator Only
            //val pic = it?.data?.getStringExtra("Image")
            //val image = B64Image.decode(pic.toString())
            //binding.imgResult.setImageBitmap(image)

            binding.txtResult.text = barcode
            

        }
    }

📺 Screenshot



⚠ About Overlay ⚠

If you planning to scan the barcode inside the box than pay attention on activity_cam.xml

    <View
        android:id="@+id/img_qr_box"
        android:layout_width="0dp"
        android:layout_height="0dp"
        app:layout_constraintWidth_percent="0.75"
        app:layout_constraintHeight_percent="0.5"
        android:elevation="5dp"
        android:background="@drawable/scanning_box"
        app:layout_constraintBottom_toBottomOf="parent"
        app:layout_constraintEnd_toEndOf="parent"
        app:layout_constraintStart_toStartOf="parent"
        app:layout_constraintTop_toTopOf="parent" />

Instead giving a fix width and height, i use percent for some purpose. The way i approch is bit dumb but is the most easy way to do so you can understand more easily (a complex code doesn't show how pro you are.)

In order to get image inside the box we have to crop it, but how?

1️⃣ First

Inside BarcodeAnalyzer before giving the image to scanner.process() the image have to be crop.

How i calculate?

But sure this method will not always perfect, but it work most of the time and i dont give a damn, you can do some minor changes by add/minus value at the back to adjust the rectangle.

⚠️ ️Update (13/10/2022) ⚠️

I realize the old version that image end up rotate anti-clockwise 90 degree and end up some device had some issue scanning barcode like CODE-128.
So in the end we need to rotate the image 90 degree clockwise before feed to the scanner.

First, getting the height and width of the picture

val height = mediaImage.height
val width = mediaImage.width

U can refer this about Rect()

//Since in the end the image will rotate clockwise 90 degree
//left -> top, top -> right, right -> bottom, bottom -> left

//Top    : (far) -value > 0 > +value (closer)
val c1x = (width * 0.125).toInt() + 150
//Right  : (far) -value > 0 > +value (closer)
val c1y = (height * 0.25).toInt() - 25
//Bottom : (closer) -value > 0 > +value (far)
val c2x = (width * 0.875).toInt() - 150
//Left   : (closer) -value > 0 > +value (far)
val c2y = (height * 0.75).toInt() + 25

val rect = Rect(c1x, c1y, c2x, c2y)

2️⃣ Second

Thanks this amazing human, convert ImageProxy to bitmap

val ori: Bitmap = imageProxy.toBitmap()!!

So we create a new image which is crop version from the original image than we need rotate the image.

val crop = Bitmap.createBitmap(ori, rect.left, rect.top, rect.width(), rect.height())
val rImage = crop.rotate(90F)

val image: InputImage =
    InputImage.fromBitmap(rImage, imageProxy.imageInfo.rotationDegrees)

// Pass image to the scanner and have it do its thing
scanner.process(image)
    .addOnSuccessListener { barcodes ->
        // Task completed successfully
        for (barcode in barcodes) {
            //For Android Emulator Only
            //barcodeListener(barcode.rawValue ?: "", image.bitmapInternal!!)
            barcodeListener(barcode.rawValue ?: "")
            imageProxy.close()
        }
    }
    .addOnFailureListener {
        // You should really do something about Exceptions
        imageProxy.close()
    }
    .addOnCompleteListener {
        // It's important to close the imageProxy
        imageProxy.close()
    }

Snap Snap? The End.....

That all. Happy Coding & keep suffering your life.

Side note 📝

  • if you wonder all those conversions ( .toBitmap() & .rotate()) will affect the performance don't worry i test on my cheap ass phone (please donate me money) it only take average 0.1 sec to process.
  • And there is some guidelines you can follow and some tips for performance
  • .setTargetResolution to 1080p for most of the case is really enough epically some high end phone like Samsung S20 it run buttery smooth and fast.