Preview.Builder


public final class Preview.Builder implements ExtendableBuilder


Builder for a Preview.

Summary

Public constructors

Creates a new Builder object.

Public methods

@NonNull Preview

Builds an immutable Preview from the current state.

@NonNull Preview.Builder

Sets the DynamicRange.

@NonNull Preview.Builder

Sets the mirror mode.

@NonNull Preview.Builder

Enable preview stabilization.

@NonNull Preview.Builder

Sets the resolution selector to select the preferred supported resolution.

@NonNull Preview.Builder
setTargetAspectRatio(int aspectRatio)

This method is deprecated.

use ResolutionSelector with AspectRatioStrategy to specify the preferred aspect ratio settings instead.

@NonNull Preview.Builder

Sets the target frame rate range in frames per second for the associated Preview use case.

@NonNull Preview.Builder

Sets the name of the target object being configured, used only for debug logging.

@NonNull Preview.Builder

This method is deprecated.

use ResolutionSelector with ResolutionStrategy to specify the preferred resolution settings instead.

@NonNull Preview.Builder
setTargetRotation(int rotation)

Sets the rotation that the intended target resolution is expressed in.

Public constructors

Builder

Added in 1.0.0
public Builder()

Creates a new Builder object.

Public methods

build

Added in 1.5.0-alpha04
public @NonNull Preview build()

Builds an immutable Preview from the current state.

Returns
@NonNull Preview

A Preview populated with the current state.

Throws
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException

if attempting to set both target aspect ratio and target resolution.

setDynamicRange

Added in 1.4.0
public @NonNull Preview.Builder setDynamicRange(@NonNull DynamicRange dynamicRange)

Sets the DynamicRange.

Dynamic range specifies how the range of colors, highlights and shadows captured by the frame producer are represented on a display. Some dynamic ranges allow the preview surface to make full use of the extended range of brightness of the display.

The supported dynamic ranges for preview depend on the capabilities of the camera and the ability of the Surface provided by the Preview.SurfaceProvider to consume the dynamic range. The supported dynamic ranges of the camera can be queried using querySupportedDynamicRanges.

As an example, having written an OpenGL frame processing pipeline that can properly handle input dynamic ranges SDR, HLG_10_BIT and HDR10_10_BIT, it's possible to filter those dynamic ranges based on which dynamic ranges the camera can produce via the Preview use case:

       // Constant defining the dynamic ranges supported as input for
       // my OpenGL processing pipeline. These will either be outputted
       // in the same dynamic range as the input or will be tone-mapped
       // to another dynamic range by my pipeline.
       List<DynamicRange> MY_SUPPORTED_DYNAMIC_RANGES = Set.of(
               DynamicRange.SDR,
               DynamicRange.HLG_10_BIT,
               DynamicRange.HDR10_10_BIT);
       ...

       // Query dynamic ranges supported by the camera from the
       // dynamic ranges supported by my processing pipeline.
       mSupportedHighDynamicRanges =
               mCameraInfo.querySupportedDynamicRanges(
                       mySupportedDynamicRanges);

       // Update our UI picker for dynamic range.
       ...


       // Create the Preview use case from the dynamic range
       // selected by the UI picker.
       mPreview = new Preview.Builder()
               .setDynamicRange(mSelectedDynamicRange)
               .build();
  

If the dynamic range is not provided, the returned Preview use case will use a default of UNSPECIFIED. When a Preview is bound with other use cases that specify a dynamic range, such as androidx.camera.video.VideoCapture, and the preview dynamic range is UNSPECIFIED, the resulting dynamic range of the preview will usually match the other use case's dynamic range. If no other use cases are bound with the preview, an UNSPECIFIED dynamic range will resolve to SDR. When using a Preview with another use case, it is recommended to leave the dynamic range of the Preview as UNSPECIFIED, so the camera can choose the best supported dynamic range that satisfies the requirements of both use cases.

If an unspecified dynamic range is used, the resolved fully-defined dynamic range of frames sent from the camera will be communicated to the Preview.SurfaceProvider via getDynamicRange, and the provided Surface should be configured to use that dynamic range.

It is possible to choose a high dynamic range (HDR) with unspecified encoding by providing HDR_UNSPECIFIED_10_BIT.

Returns
@NonNull Preview.Builder

The current Builder.

setMirrorMode

Added in 1.4.0
@ExperimentalMirrorMode
public @NonNull Preview.Builder setMirrorMode(int mirrorMode)

Sets the mirror mode.

Valid values include: MIRROR_MODE_OFF, MIRROR_MODE_ON and MIRROR_MODE_ON_FRONT_ONLY. If not set, it defaults to MIRROR_MODE_ON_FRONT_ONLY.

For API 33 and above, it will change the mirroring behavior for Preview use case. It is calling setMirrorMode.

For API 32 and below, it will be no-op.

Parameters
int mirrorMode

The mirror mode of the intended target.

Returns
@NonNull Preview.Builder

The current Builder.

See also
setMirrorMode

setPreviewStabilizationEnabled

Added in 1.4.0
public @NonNull Preview.Builder setPreviewStabilizationEnabled(boolean enabled)

Enable preview stabilization. It will enable stabilization for both the preview and video capture use cases.

Devices running Android 13 or higher can provide support for video stabilization. This feature lets apps provide a what you see is what you get (WYSIWYG) experience when comparing between the camera preview and the recording.

It is recommended to query the device capability via isStabilizationSupported before enabling this feature, otherwise HAL error might be thrown.

If both preview stabilization and video stabilization are enabled or disabled, the final result will be

Preview VideoCapture Result
ON ON Both Preview and VideoCapture will be stabilized, VideoCapture quality might be worse than only VideoCapture stabilized
ON OFF None of Preview and VideoCapture will be stabilized
ON NOT SPECIFIED Both Preview and VideoCapture will be stabilized
OFF ON None of Preview and VideoCapture will be stabilized
OFF OFF None of Preview and VideoCapture will be stabilized
OFF NOT SPECIFIED None of Preview and VideoCapture will be stabilized
NOT SPECIFIED ON Only VideoCapture will be stabilized, Preview might be stabilized depending on devices
NOT SPECIFIED OFF None of Preview and VideoCapture will be stabilized
Parameters
boolean enabled

True if enable, otherwise false.

Returns
@NonNull Preview.Builder

the current Builder.

setResolutionSelector

Added in 1.3.0
public @NonNull Preview.Builder setResolutionSelector(@NonNull ResolutionSelector resolutionSelector)

Sets the resolution selector to select the preferred supported resolution.

When using the camera-camera2 CameraX implementation, the selected resolution will be limited by the PREVIEW size which is defined as the best size match to the device's screen resolution, or to 1080p (1920x1080), whichever is smaller. See the Regular capture section in android.hardware.camera2.CameraDevice'. Applications can set any ResolutionStrategy to override it.

Note that due to compatibility reasons, CameraX may select a resolution that is larger than the default screen resolution on certain devices.

The existing setTargetResolution and setTargetAspectRatio APIs are deprecated and are not compatible with setResolutionSelector. Calling either of these APIs together with setResolutionSelector will result in an IllegalArgumentException being thrown when you attempt to build the Preview instance.

Returns
@NonNull Preview.Builder

The current Builder.

setTargetAspectRatio

Added in 1.0.0
Deprecated in 1.3.0
public @NonNull Preview.Builder setTargetAspectRatio(int aspectRatio)

Sets the aspect ratio of the intended target for images from this configuration.

The aspect ratio is the ratio of width to height in the sensor orientation.

It is not allowed to set both target aspect ratio and target resolution on the same use case. Attempting so will throw an IllegalArgumentException when building the Config.

The target aspect ratio is used as a hint when determining the resulting output aspect ratio which may differ from the request, possibly due to device constraints. Application code should check the resulting output's resolution and the resulting aspect ratio may not be exactly as requested.

For Preview, the value will be used to calculate the suggested resolution size in getResolution.

If not set, or RATIO_DEFAULT is supplied, resolutions with aspect ratio 4:3 will be considered in higher priority.

For the following devices, the aspect ratio will be forced to RATIO_16_9 regardless of the config. On these devices, the camera HAL produces a preview with a 16:9 aspect ratio regardless of the aspect ratio of the preview surface.

  • SM-J710MN, Samsung Galaxy J7 (2016)
  • SM-T580, Samsung Galaxy Tab A J7 (2016)
Parameters
int aspectRatio

The desired Preview AspectRatio

Returns
@NonNull Preview.Builder

The current Builder.

setTargetFrameRate

Added in 1.3.0
public @NonNull Preview.Builder setTargetFrameRate(@NonNull Range<Integer> targetFrameRate)

Sets the target frame rate range in frames per second for the associated Preview use case.

Device will try to get as close as possible to the target frame rate. This may affect the selected resolutions of the surfaces, resulting in better frame rates at the potential reduction of resolution.

Achieving target frame rate is dependent on device capabilities, as well as other concurrently attached use cases and their target frame rates. Because of this, the frame rate that is ultimately selected is not guaranteed to be a perfect match to the requested target.

Parameters
@NonNull Range<Integer> targetFrameRate

a desired frame rate range.

Returns
@NonNull Preview.Builder

the current Builder.

setTargetName

Added in 1.0.0
public @NonNull Preview.Builder setTargetName(@NonNull String targetName)

Sets the name of the target object being configured, used only for debug logging.

The name should be a value that can uniquely identify an instance of the object being configured.

If not set, the target name will default to an unique name automatically generated with the class canonical name and random UUID.

Parameters
@NonNull String targetName

A unique string identifier for the instance of the class being configured.

Returns
@NonNull Preview.Builder

the current Builder.

setTargetResolution

Added in 1.0.0
Deprecated in 1.3.0
public @NonNull Preview.Builder setTargetResolution(@NonNull Size resolution)

Sets the resolution of the intended target from this configuration.

The target resolution attempts to establish a minimum bound for the preview resolution. The actual preview resolution will be the closest available resolution in size that is not smaller than the target resolution, as determined by the Camera implementation. However, if no resolution exists that is equal to or larger than the target resolution, the nearest available resolution smaller than the target resolution will be chosen. Resolutions with the same aspect ratio of the provided Size will be considered in higher priority before resolutions of different aspect ratios.

It is not allowed to set both target aspect ratio and target resolution on the same use case. Attempting so will throw an IllegalArgumentException when building the Config.

The resolution Size should be expressed in the coordinate frame after rotating the supported sizes by the target rotation. For example, a device with portrait natural orientation in natural target rotation requesting a portrait image may specify 480x640, and the same device, rotated 90 degrees and targeting landscape orientation may specify 640x480.

The maximum available resolution that could be selected for a Preview is limited to be under 1080p. The limitation of 1080p for Preview has considered both performance and quality factors that users can obtain reasonable quality and smooth output stream under 1080p.

If not set, the default selected resolution will be the best size match to the device's screen resolution, or to 1080p (1920x1080), whichever is smaller. Note that due to compatibility reasons, CameraX may select a resolution that is larger than the default screen resolution on certain devices.

When using the camera-camera2 CameraX implementation, which resolution will be finally selected will depend on the camera device's hardware level and the bound use cases combination. For more details see the guaranteed supported configurations tables in android.hardware.camera2.CameraDevice's Regular capture section.

Parameters
@NonNull Size resolution

The target resolution to choose from supported output sizes list.

Returns
@NonNull Preview.Builder

The current Builder.

setTargetRotation

Added in 1.0.0
public @NonNull Preview.Builder setTargetRotation(int rotation)

Sets the rotation that the intended target resolution is expressed in.

This sets the rotation that is used when specifying a target resolution using setTargetResolution, which accepts a resolution at the target orientation.

rotation is one of four valid values: ROTATION_0, ROTATION_90, ROTATION_180, ROTATION_270. Rotation values are relative to the "natural" rotation, ROTATION_0.

For example a portrait natural device may specify a portrait image target resolution as 480x640, and the same device rotated to and displaying in landscape (i.e. as returned by getRotation) may set the target rotation to ROTATION_90 and resolution to 640x480.

If not set, the target rotation will default to the value of getRotation of the default display at the time the use case is created. The use case is fully created once it has been attached to a camera.

Note that SurfaceView does not support non-display rotation. If the target rotation is different than the value of getRotation, SurfaceView should not be used to provide the Surface in provideSurface

Parameters
int rotation

The rotation of the intended target.

Returns
@NonNull Preview.Builder

The current Builder.