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Autres articles (105)

  • L’agrémenter visuellement

    10 avril 2011

    MediaSPIP est basé sur un système de thèmes et de squelettes. Les squelettes définissent le placement des informations dans la page, définissant un usage spécifique de la plateforme, et les thèmes l’habillage graphique général.
    Chacun peut proposer un nouveau thème graphique ou un squelette et le mettre à disposition de la communauté.

  • Publier sur MédiaSpip

    13 juin 2013

    Puis-je poster des contenus à partir d’une tablette Ipad ?
    Oui, si votre Médiaspip installé est à la version 0.2 ou supérieure. Contacter au besoin l’administrateur de votre MédiaSpip pour le savoir

  • Ajouter des informations spécifiques aux utilisateurs et autres modifications de comportement liées aux auteurs

    12 avril 2011, par

    La manière la plus simple d’ajouter des informations aux auteurs est d’installer le plugin Inscription3. Il permet également de modifier certains comportements liés aux utilisateurs (référez-vous à sa documentation pour plus d’informations).
    Il est également possible d’ajouter des champs aux auteurs en installant les plugins champs extras 2 et Interface pour champs extras.

Sur d’autres sites (7629)

  • avcodec/mpeg4videodec : Use union to save space

    21 mai, par Andreas Rheinhardt
    avcodec/mpeg4videodec : Use union to save space
    

    At most one of block32 and dpcm_macroblock is used at any given time.

    Signed-off-by : Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>

    • [DH] libavcodec/mpeg4videodec.h
  • How to save a DShow input on a file and simultaneously publish it on rtst stream ?

    18 novembre 2020, par user2586476

    Piping command does not work properly when your input is coming from a device (e.g. a webcam) so you cannot work with 2 output. I need to save the webcam stream on a file (.mkv) and, at the same time, publish it on a rtst server. I tried the following :

    &#xA;

    ffmpeg -y -f dshow -loglevel info -rtbufsize 2147.48M -i "video=my_camera" -vf hflip,rotate=PI ^&#xA;-c:v libx264 -preset fast -crf 25 -pix_fmt yuv420p ^&#xA;-minrate 2M -maxrate 4M -bufsize 3.5M -s 1920x1080 -f tee "[f=mkv]'C :\test.mkv'|[f=rtsp]rtsp ://localhost:8554/mystream]"

    &#xA;

  • How to save animations with tight layout, transparency and in high quality with matplotlib ?

    29 novembre 2019, par mapf

    I am trying to implement an option in my GUI to save an image sequence displayed using matplotlib. The code looks something like this :

    import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
    from matplotlib.backends.backend_qt5agg import \
       FigureCanvasQTAgg as FigureCanvas
    from matplotlib.animation import FuncAnimation
    from PIL import Image


    plt.rcParams['savefig.bbox'] = 'tight'


    class Printer:
       def __init__(self, data):
           self.fig, self.ax = plt.subplots()
           self.canvas = FigureCanvas(self.fig)

           # some irrelevant color adjustment here
           #self.ax.spines['bottom'].set_color('#f9f2d7')
           #self.ax.spines['top'].set_color('#f9f2d7')
           #self.ax.spines['right'].set_color('#f9f2d7')
           #self.ax.spines['left'].set_color('#f9f2d7')
           #self.ax.tick_params(axis='both', colors='#f9f2d7')
           #self.ax.yaxis.label.set_color('#f9f2d7')
           #self.ax.xaxis.label.set_color('#f9f2d7')
           #self.fig.subplots_adjust(left=0.1, right=0.975, bottom=0.09, top=0.98)
           self.fig.patch.set_alpha(0)
           self.fig.patch.set_visible(False)
           self.canvas.setStyleSheet("background-color:transparent;")
           self.fig.set_size_inches(10, 10, True)
           self.fig.tight_layout()

           self.data = data
           self.image_artist = self.ax.imshow(data[0])

       def animate(self, i):
           self.image_artist.set_data(self.data[i])
           self.canvas.draw()


    def save_animation():
       data = [
           Image.open("test000.png"),
           Image.open("test001.png"),
       ]
       file = 'test.gif'
       printer = Printer(data)

       ani = FuncAnimation(
           printer.fig, printer.animate, interval=100, frames=len(data),
       )
       # writer = animation.writers['pillow'](bitrate=1000)
       ani.save(
           file, writer='pillow', savefig_kwargs={'transparent': True, 'bbox_inches': 'tight'}
       )


    save_animation()

    Transparency :

    As you can see I have already tried several different approaches as suggested elsewhere (1, 2), but didn’t manage to find a solution. All of the settings and arguments patch.set_alpha(0), patch.set_visible(False), canvas.setStyleSheet("background-color:transparent;"), savefig_kwargs={'transparent': True} seem to have no effect at all on the transparency. I found this post but I didn’t get the code to work (for one I had to comment out this %matplotlib inline, but then I ended up getting some error during the MovieWriter.cleanup out = TextIOWrapper(BytesIO(out)).read() TypeError: a bytes-like object is required, not 'str'). Here, it was suggested that this is actually a bug, but the proposed workaroud doesn’t work for me since I would have to rely on third-party software. There also exists this bug report which was supposedly solved, so maybe it is unrelated.

    Tight layout

    I actually couldn’t really find much on this, but all the things I tried (plt.rcParams['savefig.bbox'] = 'tight', fig.tight_layout(), savefig_kwargs={'bbox_inches': 'tight'}) don’t have any effect or are even actively discarded in the case of the bbox_inches argument. How does this work ?

    High quality

    Since I cannot use ImageMagick and can’t get ffmpeg to work (more on this below), I rely on pillow to save my animation. But the only argument in terms of quality that I can pass on seems to be the bitrate, which doesn’t have any effect. The files still have the same size and the animation still looks like mush. The only way that I found to increase the resolution was to use fig.set_size_inches(10, 10, True), but this still doesn’t improve the overall quality of the animation. It still looks bad. I saw that you can pass on codec and extra_args so maybe that is something that might help, but I have no idea how to use these because I couldn’t find a list with allowed arguments.

    ffmpeg

    I can’t get ffmpeg to work. I installed the python package from here and can import it into a python session but I don’t know how I can get matplotlib to use that. I also got ffmpeg from here (Windows 64-bit version) and set the plt.rcParams['animation.ffmpeg_path'] to where I saved the files (there was no intaller to run, not sure if I did it correctly). But this didn’t help either. Also this is of course also third-party software, so if somebody else were to use my code/program it wouldn’t work.