Plugin.Maui.OCR 1.0.11

There is a newer version of this package available.
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package Plugin.Maui.OCR --version 1.0.11                
NuGet\Install-Package Plugin.Maui.OCR -Version 1.0.11                
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="Plugin.Maui.OCR" Version="1.0.11" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add Plugin.Maui.OCR --version 1.0.11                
#r "nuget: Plugin.Maui.OCR, 1.0.11"                
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install Plugin.Maui.OCR as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=Plugin.Maui.OCR&version=1.0.11

// Install Plugin.Maui.OCR as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=Plugin.Maui.OCR&version=1.0.11                

alternate text is missing from this package README image

Plugin.Xamarin.OCR | Plugin.Maui.OCR

Plugin.Xamarin.OCR and Plugin.Maui.OCR provide the ability to do simple text from image OCR using nothing but platform APIs.

Should you use this yet?

YES. Let me know how it works for you.

What Works Matrix

Platform iOS Android Windows macOS
Xamarin Yes Yes WIP WIP
MAUI Yes Yes Yes Yes

Build for CI

Why

Why am I making this? I'm doing this because I want to make it easier for developers to do OCR in their apps. I want to make it so that you can just use this plugin and not have to worry about the platform specifics.

Too many times I've tried to do OCR and had to wrestle with external dependencies like Tesseract (with its dependencies Leptonica, etc) and these types of native dependencies can be a real pain to work with.

Xamarin??

Well, I still have to maintain a Xamarin app that uses Tesseract and I'm tired of all the problems that come with it. I want to make it easier for myself and others to do OCR in their apps.

Install Plugin

NuGet NuGet

Available on NuGet for MAUI and Xamarin.

Install with the dotnet CLI: dotnet add package Plugin.Maui.OCR or dotnet add package Plugin.Xamarin.OCR, or through the NuGet Package Manager in Visual Studio.

Supported Platforms

Platform Minimum Version Supported
iOS 13+
macOS 10.15+
Android 5.0 (API 21)
Windows 11 and 10 version 1809+

Pattern Matching

One of the more common things I do with OCR is recognize a text pattern. For example, I might want to read a date, a phone number or an email address. This is where the OcrPatternConfig class comes in.

Let's say you want to recognize an Ontario Health Card Number (HCN) in the text of your image. Numbers of those types have some specific qualities that make it easy to match.

  1. An Ontario HCN is 10 digits long.
  2. The number must be Luhn valid (meaning it has a check digit and it's correct).

To do this, you can create an OcrPatternConfig object like so:

bool IsValidLuhn(string number)
{
    // Convert the string to an array of digits
    int[] digits = number.Select(d => int.Parse(d.ToString())).ToArray();
    int checkDigit = 0;

    // Luhn algorithm implementation
    for (int i = digits.Length - 2; i >= 0; i--)
    {
        int currentDigit = digits[i];
        if ((digits.Length - 2 - i) % 2 == 0) // check if it's an even index from the right
        {
            currentDigit *= 2;
            if (currentDigit > 9)
            {
                currentDigit -= 9;
            }
        }
        checkDigit += currentDigit;
    }

    return (10 - (checkDigit % 10)) % 10 == digits.Last();
}

var ohipPattern = new OcrPatternConfig(@"\d{10}", IsLuhnValid);

var options = new OcrOptions.Builder().SetTryHard(true).SetPatternConfig(ohipPattern).Build();

var result = await OcrPlugin.Default.RecognizeTextAsync(imageData, options);

var patientHcn = result.MatchedValues.FirstOrDefault(); // This will be the HCN (and only the HCN) if it's found

MAUI Setup and Usage

For MAUI, to initialize make sure you use the MauiAppBuilder extension UseOcr() like so:

public static class MauiProgram
{
	public static MauiApp CreateMauiApp()
	{
		var builder = MauiApp.CreateBuilder();
		builder
			.UseMauiApp<App>()
			.ConfigureFonts(fonts =>
			{
				fonts.AddFont("OpenSans-Regular.ttf", "OpenSansRegular");
				fonts.AddFont("OpenSans-Semibold.ttf", "OpenSansSemibold");
			}).
			UseOcr();  // <-- add this line

		return builder.Build();
	}
}

And then you can just inject IOcrService into your classes and use it like so:

/// <summary>
/// Takes a photo and processes it using the OCR service.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="photo">The photo to process.</param>
/// <returns>The OCR result.</returns>
private async Task<OcrResult> ProcessPhoto(FileResult photo)
{
    // Open a stream to the photo
    using var sourceStream = await photo.OpenReadAsync();

    // Create a byte array to hold the image data
    var imageData = new byte[sourceStream.Length];

    // Read the stream into the byte array
    await sourceStream.ReadAsync(imageData);

    // Process the image data using the OCR service
    return await _ocr.RecognizeTextAsync(imageData);
}

Xamarin Setup and Usage

For Xamarin, if you have some kind of DI framework in place then you can just register the OcrPlugin with it.

public App()
{
    InitializeComponent();

    DependencyService.RegisterSingleton(OcrPlugin.Default);

    MainPage = new MainPage();
}

If you don't have a DI framework in place, you can use the OcrPlugin.Default property to access the IOcrService instance.

private readonly IOcrService _ocr;

public MainPage(IOcrService? ocr)
{
    InitializeComponent();

    _ocr = ocr ?? OcrPlugin.Default;
}

Details

The IOcrService interface exposes the following methods:

public interface IOcrService
{
    event EventHandler<OcrCompletedEventArgs> RecognitionCompleted;
    IReadOnlyCollection<string> SupportedLanguages { get; }
    Task InitAsync(CancellationToken ct = default);
    Task<OcrResult> RecognizeTextAsync(byte[] imageData, bool tryHard = false, CancellationToken ct = default);
    Task<OcrResult> RecognizeTextAsync(byte[] imageData, OcrOptions options, CancellationToken ct = default);
    Task StartRecognizeTextAsync(byte[] imageData, OcrOptions options, CancellationToken ct = default);
}

public class OcrResult
{
    public bool Success { get; set; }

    public string AllText { get; set; }

    public IList<OcrElement> Elements { get; set; } = new List<OcrElement>();
    public IList<string> Lines { get; set; } = new List<string>();

    public class OcrElement
    {
        public string Text { get; set; }
        public float Confidence { get; set; }

        // Useful for bounding boxes
        public int X { get; set; }
        public int Y { get; set; }
        public int Height { get; set; }
        public int Width { get; set; }
    }
}

Permissions

Before you can start using Feature, you will need to request the proper permissions on each platform.

iOS

If you're handling camera, you'll need the usual permissions for that.

Android

If you're handling camera, you'll need the usual permissions for that. The only extra part you'll want in the AndroidManifest.xml is the following:

<application ..>
  <meta-data android:name="com.google.mlkit.vision.DEPENDENCIES" android:value="ocr" />
</application>

This will cause the model necessary to be installed when the application is installed.

OcrOptions and Builder

The OcrOptions class provides a flexible way to configure OCR settings. You can use the OcrOptions.Builder class to create instances of OcrOptions with various configurations.

OcrOptions Class

The OcrOptions class holds the configuration for OCR operations.

public class OcrOptions
{
    public string? Language { get; }
    public bool TryHard { get; }
    public List<OcrPatternConfig> PatternConfigs { get; }
    public CustomOcrValidationCallback? CustomCallback { get; }

    private OcrOptions(string? language, bool tryHard, List<OcrPatternConfig> patternConfigs, CustomOcrValidationCallback? customCallback)
    {
        Language = language;
        TryHard = tryHard;
        PatternConfigs = patternConfigs;
        CustomCallback = customCallback;
    }

    public class Builder
    {
        private string? _language;
        private bool _tryHard;
        private List<OcrPatternConfig> _patternConfigs = new List<OcrPatternConfig>();
        private CustomOcrValidationCallback? _customCallback;

        public Builder SetLanguage(string language)
        {
            _language = language;
            return this;
        }

        public Builder SetTryHard(bool tryHard)
        {
            _tryHard = tryHard;
            return this;
        }

        public Builder AddPatternConfig(OcrPatternConfig patternConfig)
        {
            _patternConfigs.Add(patternConfig);
            return this;
        }

        public Builder SetPatternConfigs(List<OcrPatternConfig> patternConfigs)
        {
            _patternConfigs = patternConfigs ?? new List<OcrPatternConfig>();
            return this;
        }

        public Builder SetCustomCallback(CustomOcrValidationCallback customCallback)
        {
            _customCallback = customCallback;
            return this;
        }

        public OcrOptions Build()
        {
            return new OcrOptions(_language, _tryHard, _patternConfigs, _customCallback);
        }
    }
}

Usage Example

Using the OcrOptions.Builder to create an OcrOptions instance is straightforward and flexible:

var options = new OcrOptions.Builder()
    .SetLanguage("en-US")
    .SetTryHard(true)
    .AddPatternConfig(new OcrPatternConfig(@"\d{10}"))
    .SetCustomCallback(myCustomCallback)
    .Build();

Dependency Injection

You will first need to register the OcrPlugin with the MauiAppBuilder following the same pattern that the .NET MAUI Essentials libraries follow.

builder.Services.AddSingleton(OcrPlugin.Default);

You can then enable your classes to depend on IOcrService as per the following example.

public class OcrViewModel
{
    readonly IOcrService _ocr;

    public OcrViewModel(IOcrService? ocr)
    {
        _ocr = ocr ?? OcrPlugin.Default;
    }

    public void DoSomeOcr()
    {
        byte[] imageData = GetImageData();

        var result = await _ocr.RecognizeTextAsync(imageData);
    }
}

Straight usage

Alternatively if you want to skip using the dependency injection approach you can use the Feature.Default property.

public class OcrViewModel
{
    public void DoSomeOcr()
    {
        byte[] imageData = GetImageData();

        var result = await OcrPlugin.Default.RecognizeTextAsync(imageData);
    }
}

Feature

Once you have the OCR instance, you can interact with it in the following ways:

Events
RecognitionCompleted

This event is fired when the OCR service has completed recognizing text from an image. The event args contain the OcrResult object. Only fires if the StartRecognizeTextAsync method is called.

Properties
SupportedLanguages

A list of supported languages for the OCR service. This is populated after calling InitAsync. Allows you to know what language codes can be used in OcrOptions.

Methods
InitAsync(CancellationToken ct = default)

Initialize the feature. If supported on the platform (like iOS), SupportedLanguages will be populated with the available languages.

RecognizeTextAsync(byte[] imageData, bool tryHard = false, CancellationToken ct = default)

Recognize text from an image. Specify "tryHard" if you want to tell the platform API to do a better job (fast vs accurate, and use language correction (ios/mac)) though it seems very accurate normally.

RecognizeTextAsync(byte[] imageData, OcrOptions options, CancellationToken ct = default)

Recognize text from an image. OcrOptions contains options for the OCR service, including the language to use and whether to try hard.

Task StartRecognizeTextAsync(byte[] imageData, OcrOptions options, CancellationToken ct = default)

Start recognizing text from an image. This is a task that will fire the RecognitionCompleted event when it completes with the result.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to the great Gerald Versluis for making an amazing video about using this project: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=alY_6Qn0_60

Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net8.0 is compatible.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-android34.0 is compatible.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-ios17.2 is compatible.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst17.2 is compatible.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed.  net8.0-windows10.0.19041 is compatible. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.

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