ZXING: http://code.google.com/p/zxing/
QRGen consists of three modules: core
, javase
and android
.
As of 2.1.0 QRGen is available from jitpack.io. QRGen is no longer deployed to maven central (ref: #61). Older releases are available from Maven Central Repository.
Maven:
<repositories>
<repository>
<id>jitpack.io</id>
<url>https://jitpack.io</url>
</repository>
</repositories>
Gradle:
allprojects {
repositories {
// ...
maven { url "https://jitpack.io" }
}
}
See jitpack/jitpack.io#506 for solution.
(thanks to @LTheobald for the heads up)
When developing a Java application you need to add javase
module to your list of dependencies. The required core
module will be added automatically by your build system:
Gradle:
dependencies {
compile 'com.github.kenglxn.QRGen:javase:2.2.0'
}
Maven:
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.github.kenglxn.qrgen</groupId>
<artifactId>javase</artifactId>
<version>2.2.0</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
When you want to use QRGen inside your android application you need to add the android
module to your list of dependencies. The required core
module will be added automatically by your build system:
Gradle:
dependencies {
compile 'com.github.kenglxn.QRGen:android:2.2.0'
}
Maven:
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.github.kenglxn.qrgen</groupId>
<artifactId>android</artifactId>
<version>2.2.0</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
Or you can clone and build yourself:
git clone git://github.com/kenglxn/QRGen.git
cd QRGen/
mvn clean install
// get QR file from text using defaults
File file = QRCode.from("Hello World").file();
// get QR stream from text using defaults
ByteArrayOutputStream stream = QRCode.from("Hello World").stream();
// override the image type to be JPG
QRCode.from("Hello World").to(ImageType.JPG).file();
QRCode.from("Hello World").to(ImageType.JPG).stream();
// override image size to be 250x250
QRCode.from("Hello World").withSize(250, 250).file();
QRCode.from("Hello World").withSize(250, 250).stream();
// override size and image type
QRCode.from("Hello World").to(ImageType.GIF).withSize(250, 250).file();
QRCode.from("Hello World").to(ImageType.GIF).withSize(250, 250).stream();
// override default colors (black on white)
// notice that the color format is "0x(alpha: 1 byte)(RGB: 3 bytes)"
// so in the example below it's red for foreground and yellowish for background, both 100% alpha (FF).
QRCode.from("Hello World").withColor(0xFFFF0000, 0xFFFFFFAA).file();
// supply own outputstream
QRCode.from("Hello World").to(ImageType.PNG).writeTo(outputStream);
// supply own file name
QRCode.from("Hello World").file("QRCode");
// supply charset hint to ZXING
QRCode.from("Hello World").withCharset("UTF-8");
// supply error correction level hint to ZXING
QRCode.from("Hello World").withErrorCorrection(ErrorCorrectionLevel.L);
// supply any hint to ZXING
QRCode.from("Hello World").withHint(EncodeHintType.CHARACTER_SET, "UTF-8");
// encode contact data as vcard using defaults
VCard johnDoe = new VCard("John Doe")
.setEmail("[email protected]")
.setAddress("John Doe Street 1, 5678 Doestown")
.setTitle("Mister")
.setCompany("John Doe Inc.")
.setPhoneNumber("1234")
.setWebsite("www.example.org");
QRCode.from(johnDoe).file();
// if using special characters don't forget to supply the encoding
VCard johnSpecial = new VCard("Jöhn Dɵe")
.setAddress("ëåäöƞ Sträät 1, 1234 Döestüwn");
QRCode.from(johnSpecial).withCharset("UTF-8").file();
On Android you have a special method bitmap()
which returns a android.graphics.Bitmap
without creating a File
object before, so you can use the generated android.graphics.Bitmap
immediately inside an ImageView
:
Bitmap myBitmap = QRCode.from("www.example.org").bitmap();
ImageView myImage = (ImageView) findViewById(R.id.imageView);
myImage.setImageBitmap(myBitmap);