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`libcamera` presents a {cpp} API to applications and works at the level of configuring the camera and then allowing an application to request image frames. These image buffers reside in system memory and can be passed directly to still image encoders (such as JPEG) or to video encoders (such as h.264), though such ancillary functions as encoding images or displaying them are strictly beyond the purview of `libcamera` itself.

For this reason Raspberry Pi supplies a small set of example `libcamera-apps`. These are simple applications, built on top of `libcamera`, and are designed largely to emulate the function of the legacy stack built on Broadcom's propretary GPU code (some users will recognise these legacy applications as `raspstill` and `raspivid`). The applications we provide are:
For this reason Raspberry Pi supplies a small set of example `libcamera-apps`. These are simple applications, built on top of `libcamera`, and are designed largely to emulate the function of the legacy stack built on Broadcom's proprietary GPU code (some users will recognise these legacy applications as `raspstill` and `raspivid`). The applications we provide are:

* _libcamera-hello_ A simple "hello world" application which starts a camera preview stream and displays it on the screen.
* _libcamera-jpeg_ A simple application to run a preview window and then capture high resolution still images.
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