NativeScript BarcodeScanner
💡 Plugin version 4.0.0+ is compatible with NativeScript 7+. If you need to target older NativeScript versions, please stick to plugin version 3.4.2.
⚠️ With 4.1.0+ you can use beepOnScan
on iOS again (it used to crash in older 4.x versions).
Want a quick demo?
Note that running this only makes sense on a real device.
git clone https://github.com/EddyVerbruggen/nativescript-barcodescanner barcodedemo
cd barcodedemo/src
Fullscreen, programmatically (iOS and Android)
npm run demo.android (or demo.ios / demo.ios.device)
Embedded (iOS only)
npm run demo.ios
Supported barcode types
iOS and Android
- CODE_39
- CODE_93
- CODE_128
- DATA_MATRIX
- EAN_8
- EAN_13
- ITF (also known as ITF14)
- PDF_417 (on Android only when passed in explicity via
formats
) - QR_CODE
- UPC_A
- UPC_E
Android only
iOS only
- AZTEC
- CODE_39_MOD_43
- INTERLEAVED_2_OF_5
A note about UPC_A
and EAN_13
When either (or both) of these are specified, both can be returned.
You can check the actual type by inspecting the format
property of the result object.
For details, see #176.
Installation
From the command prompt go to your app's root folder and execute:
tns plugin add nativescript-barcodescanner
Embedding the scanner (iOS)
If you need to embed the scanner for Android as well, please consider using the Machine Learning powered Barcode scanner I've added to the ML Kit feature of the NativeScript Firebase plugin!
As you can see, you can style the view any way you like, and even overlay it with an image or button.
To recreate the layout above, look at these lines in the demo app.
💡 TIP: If you don't destroy the component/page which embed the scanner (but instead show a modal, or navigate "forward") you can "pause" the scanner (since plugin version 3.4.0). Simply set that pause
property to true
when applicable.
XML
<Page xmlns="http://schemas.nativescript.org/tns.xsd" xmlns:Barcode="nativescript-barcodescanner">
Here's an example tag, showing all currently supported options. The property defaults are equal to the scan
function.
<iOS>
<Barcode:BarcodeScannerView
class="scanner-round"
formats="QR_CODE, EAN_13"
beepOnScan="true"
reportDuplicates="true"
preferFrontCamera="false"
pause="{{ pause }}"
scanResult="{{ onScanResult }}" />
</iOS>
Embedding in Angular
Component / Module:
import { registerElement } from "nativescript-angular/element-registry";
registerElement("BarcodeScanner", () => require("nativescript-barcodescanner").BarcodeScannerView);
View:
<BarcodeScanner
class="scanner-round"
formats="QR_CODE, EAN_13"
beepOnScan="true"
reportDuplicates="true"
preferFrontCamera="false"
[pause]="pause"
(scanResult)="onScanResult($event)">
</BarcodeScanner>
Embedding in Vue
main.ts:
Vue.registerElement('BarcodeScanner', () => require('nativescript-barcodescanner').BarcodeScannerView)
View:
<BarcodeScanner
row="1"
height="300"
formats="QR_CODE, EAN_13, UPC_A"
beepOnScan="true"
reportDuplicates="true"
preferFrontCamera="false"
:pause="pause"
@scanResult="onScanResult"
v-if="isIOS">
</BarcodeScanner>
See 'demo-vue' for details.
iOS runtime permission reason
You've probably seen a permission popup like this before (this plugin will trigger one as well, automatically):
iOS 10+ requires not only this popup, but also a reason. In this case it's "We'd like to use the Camera ..".
You can provide your own reason for accessing the camera by adding something like this to app/App_Resources/ios/Info.plist
:
<key>NSCameraUsageDescription</key>
<string>My reason justifying fooling around with your camera</string>
To not crash your app in case you forgot to provide the reason this plugin adds an empty reason to the .plist
during build. This value gets overridden by anything you specify yourself.
Usage
Tip: during a scan you can use the volume up/down buttons to toggle the torch.
function: scan (single mode)
TypeScript
import { BarcodeScanner } from "nativescript-barcodescanner";
let barcodescanner = new BarcodeScanner();
barcodescanner.scan({
formats: "QR_CODE, EAN_13",
cancelLabel: "EXIT. Also, try the volume buttons!",
cancelLabelBackgroundColor: "#333333",
message: "Use the volume buttons for extra light",
showFlipCameraButton: true,
preferFrontCamera: false,
showTorchButton: true,
beepOnScan: true,
fullScreen: true,
torchOn: false,
closeCallback: () => { console.log("Scanner closed")},
resultDisplayDuration: 500,
orientation: orientation,
openSettingsIfPermissionWasPreviouslyDenied: true,
presentInRootViewController: true
}).then((result) => {
alert({
title: "Scan result",
message: "Format: " + result.format + ",\nValue: " + result.text,
okButtonText: "OK"
});
}, (errorMessage) => {
console.log("No scan. " + errorMessage);
}
);
Note that result.format
above is one of these.
JavaScript
var BarcodeScanner = require("nativescript-barcodescanner").BarcodeScanner;
var barcodescanner = new BarcodeScanner();
barcodescanner.scan({
formats: "QR_CODE,PDF_417",
cancelLabel: "EXIT. Also, try the volume buttons!",
cancelLabelBackgroundColor: "#333333",
message: "Use the volume buttons for extra light",
showFlipCameraButton: true,
preferFrontCamera: false,
showTorchButton: true,
beepOnScan: true,
fullScreen: true,
torchOn: false,
closeCallback: function () { console.log("Scanner closed"); },
resultDisplayDuration: 500,
orientation: "landscape",
openSettingsIfPermissionWasPreviouslyDenied: true
}).then(
function(result) {
console.log("Scan format: " + result.format);
console.log("Scan text: " + result.text);
},
function(error) {
console.log("No scan: " + error);
}
);
function: scan (bulk / continuous mode)
In this mode the scanner will continuously report scanned codes back to your code,
but it will only be dismissed if the user tells it to, or you call stop
programmatically.
The plugin handles duplicates for you so don't worry about checking those;
every result withing the same scan session is unique unless you set reportDuplicates
to true
.
Here's an example of scanning 3 unique QR codes and then stopping scanning programmatically.
You'll notice that the Promise will no longer receive the result as there may be many results:
JavaScript
var count = 0;
barcodescanner.scan({
formats: "QR_CODE",
continuousScanCallback: function (result) {
count++;
console.log(result.format + ": " + result.text + " (count: " + count + ")");
if (count === 3) {
barcodescanner.stop();
}
},
closeCallback: function () { console.log("Scanner closed"); },
reportDuplicates: false
}).then(
function() {
console.log("We're now reporting scan results in 'continuousScanCallback'");
},
function(error) {
console.log("No scan: " + error);
}
);
function: available
Note that the iOS implementation will always return true
at the moment,
on Android we actually check for a camera to be available.
JavaScript
var barcodescanner = require("nativescript-barcodescanner");
barcodescanner.available().then(
function(avail) {
console.log("Available? " + avail);
}
);
function: hasCameraPermission / requestCameraPermission
On Android 6+ you need to request permission to use the camera at runtime when targeting API level 23+.
Even if the uses-permission
tag for the Camera is present in AndroidManifest.xml
.
On iOS 10+ there's something similar going on.
Since version 1.5.0 you can let the plugin handle this for you
(if need be a prompt will be shown to the user when the scanner launches),
but if for some reason you want to handle permissions yourself you can use these functions.
JavaScript
barcodescanner.hasCameraPermission().then(
function(granted) {
console.log("Has Camera Permission? " + result);
}
);
barcodescanner.requestCameraPermission().then(
function() {
console.log("Camera permission requested");
}
);
Usage with nativescript-angular
You may have injected the BarcodeScanner
class in your component constructor in the past,
but please don't do that anymore because in release builds you may experience a crash.
So instead of:
import { Component, Inject } from '@angular/core';
import { BarcodeScanner } from 'nativescript-barcodescanner';
@Component({ ... })
export class MyComponent {
constructor(private barcodeScanner: BarcodeScanner) {
}
scanBarcode() {
this.barcodeScanner.scan({ ... });
}
}
Simply do:
import { Component, Inject } from '@angular/core';
import { BarcodeScanner } from 'nativescript-barcodescanner';
@Component({ ... })
scanBarcode() {
new BarcodeScanner().scan({ ... });
}
}
Webpack usage
If you run into an error when Webpacking, open app.module.ts
and add this:
import { BarcodeScanner } from "nativescript-barcodescanner";
export function createBarcodeScanner() {
return new BarcodeScanner();
}
providers: [
{ provide: BarcodeScanner, useFactory: (createBarcodeScanner) }
]
Troubleshooting
If you get the error TypeError: Cannot read property 'zxing' of undefined
on android, try the following steps:
- Delete the app from your device
- Remove the folder
platforms/android
. This triggers a complete rebuild - run
tns run android
Dependencies / Related Projects
This plugin wraps libaries for Android and iOS to make the barcode scanner easily accessible via a unified API. The Libraries used are:
iOS
Custom Framework to access iOS APIs: https://github.com/EddyVerbruggen/ios-framework-barcodescanner
Android
ZXing: https://github.com/zxing/zxing/releases
As using that library as a direct dependency was not practical, there is a library-project that adopts the sources from ZXing and copiles them into a AAR for usage on android: https://github.com/EddyVerbruggen/barcodescanner-lib-aar/