Skip to main content

VisualRuler uses your iPhone’s camera to measure objects in the real world

visual ruler ios app visualruler stock image
Yanukit Sujjariyarux/123RF
Unless you work in construction, there’s a good chance you don’t always carry a tape measure with you. So what do you do when you stumble upon something, and you really need to know exactly how big it is? Will that discarded futon fit in your hatchback? And how big is that 48-inch TV, really? Well, if you’re an iOS user — and assuming you do carry your phone around with you– just snap a picture of the object with the VisualRuler app and it will measure it for you.

Of course, it’s not quite that simple. As detailed by Lifehacker, VisualRuler works by comparing the size of an unknown object to the size of something it knows: a credit card. So before you take a photo, you need to place your card somewhere in the frame. The photo isn’t sent anywhere, but if you’d rather not have pictures of your credit cards lying around, you can use a gift card, store membership card, or anything else of the same dimensions. The app will automatically detect the card and place a box around it, then manually put a second box around the object to be measured. Because the app knows how big the credit card is, it can now determine how big the other object is, regardless of how far away the camera was.

VisualRuler
Image used with permission by copyright holder

It’s far from an automated process, at least at this stage of development, and the app’s accuracy is not perfect. The card must be on the same plane as the object to be measured, and the app can’t account for perspective distortion. Presumably, it would also be difficult to measure very large objects — such as a building — since the credit card would be so relatively small in the frame.

Still, the $3 VisualRuler provides a much better guesstimate than simply eyeballing things – although, in a sense, that’s exactly what it does.

While VisualRuler is not available for Android, a somewhat similar app is. It’s called Viewlers Free Digital Ruler, and it can either use a database of known objects — such as a coin — to determine the size of other objects, or turn your phone into an actual ruler based on the screen’s DPI. It looks a little janky, but that may have had something to do with the poorly lit demonstration video showing it running on an old HTC phone with a cracked screen.

Editors' Recommendations

Daven Mathies
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Daven is a contributing writer to the photography section. He has been with Digital Trends since 2016 and has been writing…
Become an iPhone video master with this powerful new app
Screenshots from the Kino app.

Avid iPhone photographers will already know the excellent Halide camera app and how it can help transform the stills you take. But they will also know it does not support video, a point the company itself has been well aware of too. That’s why it has launched Kino, a video app for the iPhone that aims to bring similar Halide-style benefits to video instead of stills.

Kino is described as a video app for beginners and experts alike, but to get the most from it, you’ll likely need to be familiar with the iPhone’s video recording modes. For example, one of the main features that makes Kino stand out is Instant Grade, which uses the Log video recording mode, which was introduced on the iPhone 15 Pro and iPhone 15 Pro Max.

Read more
Apple offers peek at how it stress tests the iPhone
Apple testing the water resistance of an iPhone.

Apple tests the water resistance of an iPhone. MKBHD

Popular tech YouTuber Marques Brownlee visited an Apple lab recently to see up close how the company tests the durability of new iPhone handsets.

Read more
Apple’s AI plans for the iPhone just leaked. Here’s everything we know
The back of a Natural Titanium iPhone 15 Pro Max.

Apple is the only major name in the world of Big Tech that hasn’t made its ambitious AI plans public yet. But that will change in a few weeks, with a focus on reimagining the iPhone experience. Bloomberg, citing internal sources, has detailed how Apple plans to integrate generative AI experiences with iOS 18, the next major build of its iPhone operating system.

The company plans to push new AI-powered capabilities not just in such in-house apps as Safari and Maps, but also in experiences like the notification system and a supercharged Spotlight search. Notably, Apple will push the bulk of AI processing to the iPhone’s silicon, and only a minor portion of it will be pushed to the cloud.

Read more