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BasicFaceTracking |
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Shows how to use the FaceTracker class to find human faces within a video stream. |
Shows how to use the FaceTracker class to find human faces within a video stream.
Note: This sample is part of a large collection of UWP feature samples. You can download this sample as a standalone ZIP file from docs.microsoft.com, or you can download the entire collection as a single ZIP file, but be sure to unzip everything to access shared dependencies. For more info on working with the ZIP file, the samples collection, and GitHub, see Get the UWP samples from GitHub. For more samples, see the Samples portal on the Windows Dev Center.
Specifically, this sample shows how to:
- Initialize and manage the FaceTracker object
- Start a live webcam capture and display the video stream
- Execute face tracking to find human faces within the video stream
- Acquire video frames from the video capture stream and convert it to a format supported by FaceTracker
- Retrieve results from FaceTracker and visualize them
Note The Windows universal samples require Visual Studio to build and Windows 10 to execute.
To obtain information about Windows 10 development, go to the Windows Dev Center
To obtain information about Microsoft Visual Studio and the tools for developing Windows apps, go to Visual Studio
The FaceTracker is intended to operate on a running video stream and is optimized to find and track human faces in real-time. In order to detect human faces within a static image or a single video frame, use the FaceDetector API instead.
BasicFaceTracking for C++/CX and VB.NET (archived)
Windows.Media.FaceAnalysis.FaceTracker
Windows.Media.FaceAnalysis namespace
Windows.Media.Capture.MediaCapture namespace
Hardware: Camera
Client: Windows 10
Server: Windows Server 2016 Technical Preview
Phone: Windows 10
- If you download the samples ZIP, be sure to unzip the entire archive, not just the folder with the sample you want to build.
- Start Microsoft Visual Studio and select File > Open > Project/Solution.
- Starting in the folder where you unzipped the samples, go to the Samples subfolder, then the subfolder for this specific sample, then the subfolder for your preferred language (C++, C#, or JavaScript). Double-click the Visual Studio Solution (.sln) file.
- Press Ctrl+Shift+B, or select Build > Build Solution.
The next steps depend on whether you just want to deploy the sample or you want to both deploy and run it.
- Select Build > Deploy Solution.
- To debug the sample and then run it, press F5 or select Debug > Start Debugging. To run the sample without debugging, press Ctrl+F5 or select Debug > Start Without Debugging.