Added in API level 14
Deprecated in API level 21

Face

open class Face
kotlin.Any
   ↳ android.hardware.Camera.Face

Information about a face identified through camera face detection.

When face detection is used with a camera, the FaceDetectionListener returns a list of face objects for use in focusing and metering.

Summary

Public constructors

Create an empty face.

Properties
Int

An unique id per face while the face is visible to the tracker.

Point!

The coordinates of the center of the left eye.

Point!

The coordinates of the center of the mouth.

Rect!

Bounds of the face.

Point!

The coordinates of the center of the right eye.

Int

The confidence level for the detection of the face.

Public constructors

Face

Added in API level 14
Face()

Create an empty face.

Properties

id

Added in API level 14
var id: Int

Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.

An unique id per face while the face is visible to the tracker. If the face leaves the field-of-view and comes back, it will get a new id. This is an optional field, may not be supported on all devices. If not supported, id will always be set to -1. The optional fields are supported as a set. Either they are all valid, or none of them are.

leftEye

Added in API level 14
var leftEye: Point!

Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.

The coordinates of the center of the left eye. The coordinates are in the same space as the ones for rect. This is an optional field, may not be supported on all devices. If not supported, the value will always be set to null. The optional fields are supported as a set. Either they are all valid, or none of them are.

mouth

Added in API level 14
var mouth: Point!

Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.

The coordinates of the center of the mouth. The coordinates are in the same space as the ones for rect. This is an optional field, may not be supported on all devices. If not supported, the value will always be set to null. The optional fields are supported as a set. Either they are all valid, or none of them are.

rect

Added in API level 14
var rect: Rect!

Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.

Bounds of the face. (-1000, -1000) represents the top-left of the camera field of view, and (1000, 1000) represents the bottom-right of the field of view. For example, suppose the size of the viewfinder UI is 800x480. The rect passed from the driver is (-1000, -1000, 0, 0). The corresponding viewfinder rect should be (0, 0, 400, 240). It is guaranteed left < right and top < bottom. The coordinates can be smaller than -1000 or bigger than 1000. But at least one vertex will be within (-1000, -1000) and (1000, 1000).

The direction is relative to the sensor orientation, that is, what the sensor sees. The direction is not affected by the rotation or mirroring of setDisplayOrientation(int). The face bounding rectangle does not provide any information about face orientation.

Here is the matrix to convert driver coordinates to View coordinates in pixels.

Matrix matrix = new Matrix();
  CameraInfo info = CameraHolder.instance().getCameraInfo()[cameraId];
  // Need mirror for front camera.
  boolean mirror = (info.facing == CameraInfo.CAMERA_FACING_FRONT);
  matrix.setScale(mirror ? -1 : 1, 1);
  // This is the value for android.hardware.Camera.setDisplayOrientation.
  matrix.postRotate(displayOrientation);
  // Camera driver coordinates range from (-1000, -1000) to (1000, 1000).
  // UI coordinates range from (0, 0) to (width, height).
  matrix.postScale(view.getWidth() / 2000f, view.getHeight() / 2000f);
  matrix.postTranslate(view.getWidth() / 2f, view.getHeight() / 2f);
  

rightEye

Added in API level 14
var rightEye: Point!

Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.

The coordinates of the center of the right eye. The coordinates are in the same space as the ones for rect.This is an optional field, may not be supported on all devices. If not supported, the value will always be set to null. The optional fields are supported as a set. Either they are all valid, or none of them are.

score

Added in API level 14
var score: Int

Deprecated: Deprecated in Java.

The confidence level for the detection of the face. The range is 1 to 100. 100 is the highest confidence.

Depending on the device, even very low-confidence faces may be listed, so applications should filter out faces with low confidence, depending on the use case. For a typical point-and-shoot camera application that wishes to display rectangles around detected faces, filtering out faces with confidence less than 50 is recommended.