21

I am working on a feature for my Android app. I would like to read text from a picture then save that text in a database. Is using OCR the best way? Is there another way? Google suggests in its documentation that NDK should only be used if strictly necessary but what are the downfalls exactly?

Any help would be great.

Image to be OCR'd

enter image description here

enter image description here

enter image description here

1
  • I am also looking for solution something like this and while reading, I landed on SO here. I would like to ask you did you find any feasible solution for this. After reading two answers down I am bit confused. Which one did you follow and what were their accuracy. Mind to share your case studies ? Thank you. Apr 19, 2017 at 4:57

4 Answers 4

27

you can use google vision library for convert image to text, it will give better output from image. Add below library in build gradle:

   compile 'com.google.android.gms:play-services-vision:10.0.0+'

    TextRecognizer textRecognizer = new TextRecognizer.Builder(getApplicationContext()).build();

Frame imageFrame = new Frame.Builder()

        .setBitmap(bitmap)                 // your image bitmap
        .build();

String imageText = "";


SparseArray<TextBlock> textBlocks = textRecognizer.detect(imageFrame);

for (int i = 0; i < textBlocks.size(); i++) {
    TextBlock textBlock = textBlocks.get(textBlocks.keyAt(i));
    imageText = textBlock.getValue();                   // return string
}
1
  • Thanks, it's working but not recognizing the dots(.) in the text. How can we get the complete value including dots in it? May 4, 2021 at 5:27
4

From this Simple example of OCRReader in Android tutorial you can read text from image and also you can scan for text using camera, using very simple code.

This library is developed using Mobile Vision Text API

For scan text from camera

OCRCapture.Builder(this)
        .setUseFlash(true)
        .setAutoFocus(true)
        .buildWithRequestCode(CAMERA_SCAN_TEXT);

For extract text from image

String text = OCRCapture.Builder(this).getTextFromUri(pickedImage);
//You can also use getTextFromBitmap(Bitmap bitmap) or getTextFromImage(String imagePath) buplic APIs from OCRLibrary library.
1
  • How to set the language here?
    – Yamuna
    Nov 13, 2018 at 12:13
1

Text from an image can be extracted using Firebase machine learning (ML) kit. There are two versions of the text recognition API, on-device API (free) and on-cloud API.

To use the API, first create BitMap of the image, which should be upright. Then create FirebaseVisionImage object passing the bitmap object.

FirebaseVisionImage image = FirebaseVisionImage.fromBitmap(bitmap);

Then create FirebaseVisionTextRecognizer object.

FirebaseVisionTextRecognizer textRecognizer = FirebaseVision.getInstance()
        .getCloudTextRecognizer();

Then pass the FirebaseVisionImage object to processImage() method, add listeners to the resulting task and capture the extracted text in success callback method.

textRecognizer.processImage(image)
                .addOnSuccessListener(new OnSuccessListener<FirebaseVisionText>() {
                    @Override
                    public void onSuccess(FirebaseVisionText firebaseVisionText) {
                       //process success
                    }
                })
                .addOnFailureListener(new OnFailureListener() {
                     @Override
                     public void onFailure(@NonNull Exception e) {
                       //process failure
                     }
                 });

For complete example which shows how to use Firebase ML text recognizer, see https://www.zoftino.com/extracting-text-from-images-android

0

There is a different option. You can upload your image to the server, OCR it from the server, then get the result.

8
  • Thank you for the reply, how reliable would this be? Are there any real-world applications out there that use this method? May 22, 2016 at 15:40
  • Again thank you for your reply. Is there a possibility you could add some details in there? How accurate can it be?, What real world applications use it? I tested an industry standard OCR and it did not provide anything more than 40% accuracy. (For my needed use) May 25, 2016 at 11:12
  • accuracy depends on your input quality, please share image sample, the question cannot be answered without the image samples. May 25, 2016 at 11:31
  • I understand this and that is why the accuracy level is so low. The images will never me the same and the quality of them will change dramatically from size, text, colours, quality etc. May 25, 2016 at 11:57
  • OK. There are real-word applications which do that client-server way, but I'm not sure if I'm allowed to tell the app names (probably not). The attched image gets only 1 OCR error (% replaced by *), I don't see any problems here. May 25, 2016 at 12:04

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