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Bug de détection d’ogg
22 mars 2013, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : français
Type : Video
Autres articles (83)
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Menus personnalisés
14 novembre 2010, parMediaSPIP utilise le plugin Menus pour gérer plusieurs menus configurables pour la navigation.
Cela permet de laisser aux administrateurs de canaux la possibilité de configurer finement ces menus.
Menus créés à l’initialisation du site
Par défaut trois menus sont créés automatiquement à l’initialisation du site : Le menu principal ; Identifiant : barrenav ; Ce menu s’insère en général en haut de la page après le bloc d’entête, son identifiant le rend compatible avec les squelettes basés sur Zpip ; (...) -
Use, discuss, criticize
13 avril 2011, parTalk to people directly involved in MediaSPIP’s development, or to people around you who could use MediaSPIP to share, enhance or develop their creative projects.
The bigger the community, the more MediaSPIP’s potential will be explored and the faster the software will evolve.
A discussion list is available for all exchanges between users. -
MediaSPIP 0.1 Beta version
25 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP 0.1 beta is the first version of MediaSPIP proclaimed as "usable".
The zip file provided here only contains the sources of MediaSPIP in its standalone version.
To get a working installation, you must manually install all-software dependencies on the server.
If you want to use this archive for an installation in "farm mode", you will also need to proceed to other manual (...)
Sur d’autres sites (10217)
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Generating movie from python without saving individual frames to files
31 juillet 2022, par PaulI would like to create an h264 or divx movie from frames that I generate in a python script in matplotlib. There are about 100k frames in this movie.



In examples on the web [eg. 1], I have only seen the method of saving each frame as a png and then running mencoder or ffmpeg on these files. In my case, saving each frame is impractical. Is there a way to take a plot generated from matplotlib and pipe it directly to ffmpeg, generating no intermediate files ?



Programming with ffmpeg's C-api is too difficult for me [eg. 2]. Also, I need an encoding that has good compression such as x264 as the movie file will otherwise be too large for a subsequent step. So it would be great to stick with mencoder/ffmpeg/x264.



Is there something that can be done with pipes [3] ?



[1] http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/examples/animation/movie_demo.html



[2] How does one encode a series of images into H264 using the x264 C API ?



[3] http://www.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg-doc.html#SEC41


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Generating movie from python without saving individual frames to files
31 juillet 2022, par PaulI would like to create an h264 or divx movie from frames that I generate in a python script in matplotlib. There are about 100k frames in this movie.



In examples on the web [eg. 1], I have only seen the method of saving each frame as a png and then running mencoder or ffmpeg on these files. In my case, saving each frame is impractical. Is there a way to take a plot generated from matplotlib and pipe it directly to ffmpeg, generating no intermediate files ?



Programming with ffmpeg's C-api is too difficult for me [eg. 2]. Also, I need an encoding that has good compression such as x264 as the movie file will otherwise be too large for a subsequent step. So it would be great to stick with mencoder/ffmpeg/x264.



Is there something that can be done with pipes [3] ?



[1] http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/examples/animation/movie_demo.html



[2] How does one encode a series of images into H264 using the x264 C API ?



[3] http://www.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg-doc.html#SEC41


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Generating movie from python without saving individual frames to files
8 avril 2015, par PaulI would like to create an h264 or divx movie from frames that I generate in a python script in matplotlib. There are about 100k frames in this movie.
In examples on the web [eg. 1], I have only seen the method of saving each frame as a png and then running mencoder or ffmpeg on these files. In my case, saving each frame is impractical. Is there a way to take a plot generated from matplotlib and pipe it directly to ffmpeg, generating no intermediate files ?
Programming with ffmpeg’s C-api is too difficult for me [eg. 2]. Also, I need an encoding that has good compression such as x264 as the movie file will otherwise be too large for a subsequent step. So it would be great to stick with mencoder/ffmpeg/x264.
Is there something that can be done with pipes [3] ?
[1] http://matplotlib.sourceforge.net/examples/animation/movie_demo.html