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Médias (1)
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Bug de détection d’ogg
22 mars 2013, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : français
Type : Video
Autres articles (55)
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Qu’est ce qu’un masque de formulaire
13 juin 2013, parUn masque de formulaire consiste en la personnalisation du formulaire de mise en ligne des médias, rubriques, actualités, éditoriaux et liens vers des sites.
Chaque formulaire de publication d’objet peut donc être personnalisé.
Pour accéder à la personnalisation des champs de formulaires, il est nécessaire d’aller dans l’administration de votre MediaSPIP puis de sélectionner "Configuration des masques de formulaires".
Sélectionnez ensuite le formulaire à modifier en cliquant sur sont type d’objet. (...) -
MediaSPIP v0.2
21 juin 2013, parMediaSPIP 0.2 is the first MediaSPIP stable release.
Its official release date is June 21, 2013 and is announced here.
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 (...) -
Support audio et vidéo HTML5
10 avril 2011MediaSPIP utilise les balises HTML5 video et audio pour la lecture de documents multimedia en profitant des dernières innovations du W3C supportées par les navigateurs modernes.
Pour les navigateurs plus anciens, le lecteur flash Flowplayer est utilisé.
Le lecteur HTML5 utilisé a été spécifiquement créé pour MediaSPIP : il est complètement modifiable graphiquement pour correspondre à un thème choisi.
Ces technologies permettent de distribuer vidéo et son à la fois sur des ordinateurs conventionnels (...)
Sur d’autres sites (7848)
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ffmpeg - convert video into individual frame image files ? [closed]
2 janvier 2021, par MrFunreali am trying to turn every single frame of a video file into png files using ffmpeg.
i have found several guides on how to do that, most of which look the same, by doing this :




ffmpeg -i vid.mp4 frames/out%03d.png




However, this does not work. FFmpeg for some reason just replaces the "%0" of the output file with the entire path of the bat file and then tells me that's wrong, like so :




[image2 @ 000002c6aa87f680] Could not open file :
frames/outG :\Videos\vid_to_frames\3_video_to_frames.bat3d.jpg
av_interleaved_write_frame() : I/O error




If i remove the "%0" of the output file it creates a single frame and gives me an error, telling me i need to put the "%03d" into the name, which doesn't work.




[image2 @ 000001dc9a09fd40] Could not get frame filename number 2 from
pattern '$filename3d.png'. Use '-frames:v 1' for a single image, or
'-update' option, or use a pattern such as %03d within the filename.
av_interleaved_write_frame() : Invalid argument




Is this just broken ?
I found about 20 guides on how to do it, all of which use this exact same method and it just doesn't work.


Does anyone know another way to do this via ffmpeg ? (it must be via ffmpeg)


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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
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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