I have built openCV to get opencv2.framework. I added this to my xcode iOS project by going to \"build phases->Link Binary With Libraries\", then tried to include \"opencv2
Took me 4 hours to figure this out. This is how I got this to work : Along with the opencv framework add the following frameworks in the build phases:
Accelerate, AssetsLibrary, AVFoundation , CoreGraphics , CoreImage , CoreMedia , CoreVideo , QuartzCore , UIKit , Foundation.
Then, in the .pch file add these lines before UIKit and Foundation imports :
#ifdef __cplusplus
#import <opencv2/opencv.hpp>
#endif
Here is my answer for this.
Environment: XCode 8.1
Download page: http://opencv.org/downloads.html. Choose any link for iOS.
Important step: while downloading opencv2.framework, you must use ".zip" format, not ".framework" format, afterwards, unzip it to opencv2.framework. It is weird, but it should work. Meanwhile, you have to rename it to opencv2.framework if the unzipped one is not.
just drag and drop the framework to your iOS project. No any settings are required. You could refer to this for testing : www.youtube.com/watch?v=ywUBHqxwM5Q.
Make sure in Build Settings for the Target, you have the Framework Search Path in the Search Paths section set to the correct path to where your framework is located in your directory. You can do this by clicking to the right of Framework Search Path in the white space, click the + sign and add $(PROJECT_DIR) then click + again and add $(inherited). Make sure the framework is located in your main directory for your project at hand. This worked for me, as I encountered the same problem.
Hope this helps!
What worked for me was very simple:
*NOTE THE DIFFERENCE FOR IOS vs. OS X PROJECTS
FOR IOS:
Put the opencv download (for 3.0.0 it is just a drag and drop kind of thing) into the project specific Xcode folder. Then set the Frame Search Paths to $(PROJECT_DIR). The Frame Search Path is located under the Build Settings. No other paths need to be set.
Lastly, right click in the navigator pane and click "Add Files to..." in order to add in the opencv library from the project folder.
FOR OSX:
check out Tim's tutorial: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OVSPfUmNyOw
In my case the symbolic links to the header files were broken. This was caused by cloning the following great example project:
https://github.com/BloodAxe/OpenCV-Tutorial
In the cloned project, the header files were not reachable anymore. After reimporting the opencv2.framework from the official opencv ios download site (OpenCV for iOS), the headers were available again. XCode should look as follows:
The following is a screenshot of a Xcode project with broken headers. With broken header files, the xcode project looks as follows:
From my experience, it is not necessary to add so many other frameworks. Instead, only need opencv2 and add "#import " in prefixheader.pch
The thing is that MUST set correct Framework Search Paths as mentioned above unless opencv2 framework folder is in your project directory.
Notice: don't set wrong location in Framework Search Paths as there are two "YourProjectName". Set the 1st one (belongs to TARGETS), not the 2nd one(belongs to PROJECT). I made the mistake.