Reputation: 4356
So what I'm trying to do is take the Kinect Skeletal Sample and save x amount of photos, only when a human goes by. I have gotten it to work, except once it detects a human it just records x amount of photos even once the person leaves the vision of Kinect. Does anyone know how to make it so that once a person enters it starts recording, and once they leave it stops?
Variables
Runtime nui;
int totalFrames = 0;
int totalFrames2 = 0;
int lastFrames = 0;
int lastFrameWithMotion = 0;
int stopFrameNumber = 100;
DateTime lastTime = DateTime.MaxValue;
Entering/Exiting the Frame
void nui_SkeletonFrameReady(object sender, SkeletonFrameReadyEventArgs e)
{
SkeletonFrame skeletonFrame = e.SkeletonFrame;
int iSkeleton = 0;
++totalFrames;
string bb1 = Convert.ToString(totalFrames);
//Uri uri1 = new Uri("C:\\Research\\Kinect\\Proposal_Skeleton\\Skeleton_Img" + bb1 + ".png");
Uri uri1 = new Uri("C:\\temp\\Skeleton_Img" + bb1 + ".png");
// string file_name_3 = "C:\\Research\\Kinect\\Proposal_Skeleton\\Skeleton_Img" + bb1 + ".png"; // xxx
Brush[] brushes = new Brush[6];
brushes[0] = new SolidColorBrush(Color.FromRgb(255, 0, 0));
brushes[1] = new SolidColorBrush(Color.FromRgb(0, 255, 0));
brushes[2] = new SolidColorBrush(Color.FromRgb(64, 255, 255));
brushes[3] = new SolidColorBrush(Color.FromRgb(255, 255, 64));
brushes[4] = new SolidColorBrush(Color.FromRgb(255, 64, 255));
brushes[5] = new SolidColorBrush(Color.FromRgb(128, 128, 255));
skeleton.Children.Clear();
//byte[] skeletonFrame32 = new byte[(int)(skeleton.Width) * (int)(skeleton.Height) * 4];
foreach (SkeletonData data in skeletonFrame.Skeletons)
{
if (SkeletonTrackingState.Tracked == data.TrackingState)
{
// Draw bones
Brush brush = brushes[iSkeleton % brushes.Length];
skeleton.Children.Add(getBodySegment(data.Joints, brush, JointID.HipCenter, JointID.Spine, JointID.ShoulderCenter, JointID.Head));
skeleton.Children.Add(getBodySegment(data.Joints, brush, JointID.ShoulderCenter, JointID.ShoulderLeft, JointID.ElbowLeft, JointID.WristLeft, JointID.HandLeft));
skeleton.Children.Add(getBodySegment(data.Joints, brush, JointID.ShoulderCenter, JointID.ShoulderRight, JointID.ElbowRight, JointID.WristRight, JointID.HandRight));
skeleton.Children.Add(getBodySegment(data.Joints, brush, JointID.HipCenter, JointID.HipLeft, JointID.KneeLeft, JointID.AnkleLeft, JointID.FootLeft));
skeleton.Children.Add(getBodySegment(data.Joints, brush, JointID.HipCenter, JointID.HipRight, JointID.KneeRight, JointID.AnkleRight, JointID.FootRight));
// Draw joints
// try to add a comment, xxx
foreach (Joint joint in data.Joints)
{
Point jointPos = getDisplayPosition(joint);
Line jointLine = new Line();
jointLine.X1 = jointPos.X - 3;
jointLine.X2 = jointLine.X1 + 6;
jointLine.Y1 = jointLine.Y2 = jointPos.Y;
jointLine.Stroke = jointColors[joint.ID];
jointLine.StrokeThickness = 6;
skeleton.Children.Add(jointLine);
}
// ExportToPng(uri1, skeleton);
// SoundPlayerAction Source = "C:/LiamScienceFair/muhaha.wav";
//SoundPlayer player1 = new SoundPlayer("muhaha.wav")
// player1.Play();
// MediaPlayer.
// axWindowsMediaPlayer1.currentPlaylist = axWindowsMediaPlayer1.mediaCollection.getByName("mediafile");
nui.VideoFrameReady += new EventHandler<ImageFrameReadyEventArgs>(nui_ColorFrameReady2);
}
iSkeleton++;
} // for each skeleton
}
Actual Code
void nui_ColorFrameReady2(object sender, ImageFrameReadyEventArgs e)
{
// 32-bit per pixel, RGBA image xxx
PlanarImage Image = e.ImageFrame.Image;
int deltaFrames = totalFrames - lastFrameWithMotion;
if (totalFrames2 <= stopFrameNumber & deltaFrames > 300)
{
++totalFrames2;
string bb1 = Convert.ToString(totalFrames2);
// string file_name_3 = "C:\\Research\\Kinect\\Proposal\\Depth_Img" + bb1 + ".jpg"; xxx
string file_name_4 = "C:\\temp\\Video2_Img" + bb1 + ".jpg";
video.Source = BitmapSource.Create(
Image.Width, Image.Height, 96, 96, PixelFormats.Bgr32, null, Image.Bits, Image.Width * Image.BytesPerPixel);
BitmapSource image4 = BitmapSource.Create(
Image.Width, Image.Height, 96, 96, PixelFormats.Bgr32, null, Image.Bits, Image.Width * Image.BytesPerPixel);
image4.Save(file_name_4, Coding4Fun.Kinect.Wpf.ImageFormat.Jpeg);
if (totalFrames2 == stopFrameNumber)
{
lastFrameWithMotion = totalFrames;
stopFrameNumber += 100;
}
}
}
Upvotes: 3
Views: 2184
Reputation: 1792
In most setups I have used in the skeletal tracking event area there is a check for if (skeleton != null) all you need to do is reset your trigger once a null skeleton is received.
The SDK will send a skeleton frame every time the event is fired so...
if(skeleton != null)
{
\\do image taking here
}
else
{
\\reset image counter
}
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 89082
I would try something like this. Create a bool class variable named SkeletonInFrame and initialize it to false. Every time SkeletonFrameReady fires, set this bool to true. When you process a color frame, only process if this variable is true. Then after you process a color frame, set the variable to false. This should help you stop processing frame when you are no longer receiving skeleton events.
Upvotes: 2