user1469734
user1469734

Reputation: 801

Deprecation of createObjectURL and replace with the new HTMLMediaElement.srcObject doesn't work for Webcam stream

I get the warning that a function will be deprecated in Chrome future release.

It's this script:

navigator.getUserMedia = navigator.getUserMedia || navigator.webkitGetUserMedia || navigator.mozGetUserMedia || navigator.msGetUserMedia || navigator.oGetUserMedia;
if (navigator.getUserMedia) {
    navigator.getUserMedia({
        video: true
    }, (stream) => {
        this.src = window.URL.createObjectURL(stream);
        this.stream = stream;
    }, (error) => {
        console.log(error);
    });
}

That records webcam so I can save it, but the following warning is shown in the console:

[Deprecation] URL.createObjectURL with media streams is deprecated and will be removed in M68, around July 2018. Please use HTMLMediaElement.srcObject instead.

But when I change:

this.src = window.URL.createObjectURL(stream);

To

this.src = window.HTMLMediaElement.srcObject(stream);

It doesn't work anymore like it did before..

Upvotes: 28

Views: 37470

Answers (3)

Barkermn01
Barkermn01

Reputation: 6842

Your misunderstanding what HTMLMediaElement is.

It is the JavaScript Class/Prototype that represents a HTML <audio> or <video> tag whether it's in the HTML or not.

For a more class like explanation <audio> on the page is an object of type HTMLAudioElement and that extends HTMLMediaElement and that in turn extends HTMLElement.

If you get the media element with querySelector() or getElementById() or create a media element in JavaScript with createElement("audio") or createElement("video") you'll get an instance of HTMLMediaElement.

In your case this is an object of HTMLMediaElement class.

With JavaScript, as a rule of thumb if the object type name starts with HTML it is referring to an HTML Element / Tag.

All you need to do is change

this.src = window.URL.createObjectURL(stream);

to

if ('srcObject' in this) {
  this.srcObject = stream;
} else {
  this.src = window.URL.createObjectURL(stream);
}

This is taken from Mozilla Documentation

Upvotes: 65

YaTaras
YaTaras

Reputation: 5329

Replacing this.src = window.URL.createObjectURL(stream); by this.srcObject = stream; should fix the problem.

Upvotes: 9

Fernando Rivero
Fernando Rivero

Reputation: 103

If you are using Chrome you can use:

video.srcObject = stream;

instead of:

this.srcObject = stream;

Upvotes: 0

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