View Single Post
  #5   Spotlight this post!  
Unread 10-01-2017, 11:51
Peter Johnson Peter Johnson is online now
WPILib Developer
FRC #0294 (Beach Cities Robotics)
Team Role: Mentor
 
Join Date: Jan 2010
Rookie Year: 2008
Location: Redondo Beach, CA
Posts: 264
Peter Johnson has much to be proud ofPeter Johnson has much to be proud ofPeter Johnson has much to be proud ofPeter Johnson has much to be proud ofPeter Johnson has much to be proud ofPeter Johnson has much to be proud ofPeter Johnson has much to be proud ofPeter Johnson has much to be proud of
Re: 2 Cameras Setup (Lifecam HD 3000)

CameraServer has changed substantially for 2017, so the discussion/suggestions from 2016 no longer apply (I'm the author of the 2017 rewrite). To start two cameras, simply do (Java):
Code:
UsbCamera cam0 = CameraServer.getInstance().startAutomaticCapture(0);
UsbCamera cam1 = CameraServer.getInstance().startAutomaticCapture(1);
Note the no-arguments variant of startAutomaticCapture always starts camera 0. Thinking about this, it may be a good idea for us to make this auto-increment in the future to make this a bit easier to use.

There is no stopCamera() in 2017; the camera automatically starts and stops depending on what's connected to it.

You may run into USB bandwidth limits running two cameras simultaneously. Keeping the resolution low is a good way to avoid this. Streaming one camera at a time and switching between them to conserve USB bandwidth isn't well-supported at present (there's nothing to prevent one camera starting before the other stops and thus hitting the bandwidth limit); that's something we will be addressing in a future update.
__________________
Author of cscore - WPILib CameraServer for 2017+
Author of ntcore - WPILib NetworkTables for 2016+
Creator of RobotPy - Python for FRC

2010 FRC World Champions (294, 67, 177)
2007 FTC World Champions (30, 74, 23)
2001 FRC National Champions (71, 294, 125, 365, 279)
Reply With Quote