I am using OpenCV 2.4.6 with VS2010.
I think my webcam can't capture the frame. When I executed the code it built successfully, but I am not getting output. I think, when I check if(!bSuccess) it is executed and can't capture frame from the webcam. 
How can I resolve this problem? My code is below:
#include "opencv2/highgui/highgui.hpp"
#include 
using namespace cv;
using namespace std;
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
    VideoCapture cap(0); // open the video camera no. 0
    if (!cap.isOpened())  // if not success, exit program
    {
    cout  << "Cannot open the video file" << endl;
        return -1;
    }
   double dWidth = cap.get(CV_CAP_PROP_FRAME_WIDTH); //get the width of frames of the video
   double dHeight = cap.get(CV_CAP_PROP_FRAME_HEIGHT); //get the height of frames of the  video
    cout << "Frame size : " << dWidth << " x " << dHeight << endl;
    namedWindow("MyVideo",CV_WINDOW_AUTOSIZE); //create a window called "MyVideo"
    while (1)
    {
       Mat frame;
       bool bSuccess = cap.read(frame); // read a new frame from video
       if (!bSuccess) //if not success, break loop
        {
         cout << "Cannot read a frame from video file" << endl;
            break;
        }
        imshow("MyVideo", frame); //show the frame in "MyVideo" window
        if (waitKey(30) == 27) 
        {
        cout << "esc key is pressed by user" << endl;
          break; 
        }
    }
    return 0;
}
                add this line cap.retrieve(frame);
before line with bool bSuccess = cap.read(frame);
in some openCV libs the VideoCapture cap(0);bool bSuccess = cap.read(frame); will first return an 0. So for in a while(1) loop it will fail at the first iteration. So you need to run the cap.read(frame); line one time before entering into your infinite loop  
#include "opencv2/highgui/highgui.hpp"
#include <iostream>
using namespace cv;
using namespace std;
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
    VideoCapture cap(0); // open the video camera no. 0
    if (!cap.isOpened())  // if not success, exit program
    {
        cout << "Cannot open the video cam" << endl;
        return -1;
    }
   double dWidth = cap.get(CV_CAP_PROP_FRAME_WIDTH); //get the width of frames of the video
   double dHeight = cap.get(CV_CAP_PROP_FRAME_HEIGHT); //get the height of frames of the video
    cout << "Frame size : " << dWidth << " x " << dHeight << endl;
    namedWindow("MyVideo",CV_WINDOW_AUTOSIZE); //create a window called "MyVideo"
    Mat frame;
cap.read(frame);
while (1)
{
    bool bSuccess = cap.read(frame); // read a new frame from video
     if (!bSuccess) //if not success, break loop
    {
         cout << "Cannot read a frame from video stream" << endl;
         break;
    }
    imshow("MyVideo", frame); //show the frame in "MyVideo" window
    if (waitKey(30) == 27) //wait for 'esc' key press for 30ms. If 'esc' key is pressed, break loop
   {
        cout << "esc key is pressed by user" << endl;
        break;
   }
}
return 0;
}
Try without this part of your code:
double dWidth = cap.get(CV_CAP_PROP_FRAME_WIDTH); //get the width of frames of the video
double dHeight = cap.get(CV_CAP_PROP_FRAME_HEIGHT); //get the height of frames of the  video
cout << "Frame size : " << dWidth << " x " << dHeight << endl;
namedWindow("MyVideo",CV_WINDOW_AUTOSIZE); //create a window called "MyVideo"
or try to get at least one frame from camera before getting or setting camera properties - i think that on Windows camera in opencv isn't fully optimized before getting first frame.
Alternatively you may try to use different API - see ma answer here: OpenCV on Mac is not opening USB web camera
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