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Publier une image simplement
13 avril 2011, par ,
Mis à jour : Février 2012
Langue : français
Type : Video
Autres articles (103)
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Multilang : améliorer l’interface pour les blocs multilingues
18 février 2011, parMultilang est un plugin supplémentaire qui n’est pas activé par défaut lors de l’initialisation de MediaSPIP.
Après son activation, une préconfiguration est mise en place automatiquement par MediaSPIP init permettant à la nouvelle fonctionnalité d’être automatiquement opérationnelle. Il n’est donc pas obligatoire de passer par une étape de configuration pour cela. -
Personnaliser en ajoutant son logo, sa bannière ou son image de fond
5 septembre 2013, parCertains thèmes prennent en compte trois éléments de personnalisation : l’ajout d’un logo ; l’ajout d’une bannière l’ajout d’une image de fond ;
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Gestion des droits de création et d’édition des objets
8 février 2011, parPar défaut, beaucoup de fonctionnalités sont limitées aux administrateurs mais restent configurables indépendamment pour modifier leur statut minimal d’utilisation notamment : la rédaction de contenus sur le site modifiables dans la gestion des templates de formulaires ; l’ajout de notes aux articles ; l’ajout de légendes et d’annotations sur les images ;
Sur d’autres sites (5919)
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script doesnt recognize bars / lenght right for cutting audio , ffmpeg terminal
14 avril 2024, par totzillarbeatsThis Terminal script doesnt recognize bars / lenght right for cutting audio , maybe somebody knows whats wrong with the calculation :)


Would be happy about any help the cutting already works !


#!/bin/bash

# Function to extract BPM from filename

get_bpm() {
 local filename="$1"
 local bpm=$(echo "$filename" | grep -oE '[0-9]{1,3}' | head -n1)
 echo "$bpm"
}

# Function to cut audio based on BPM
cut_audio() {
 local input_file="$1"
 local bpm="$2"
 local output_file="${input_file%.*}_cut.${input_file##*.}" # Appends "_cut" to original filename

 # Define the number of beats per bar (assuming 4 beats per bar)
 beats_per_bar=4

 # Calculate the duration of each bar in seconds
 bar_duration=$((60 * beats_per_bar / bpm))

 # Define start and end times for each bar range
 start_times=(0 21 33 45 57 69 81 93 105 117 129 141)
 end_times=(20 29 41 53 65 77 89 101 113 125 137 149)

 # Iterate through each bar range
 for ((i = 0; i < ${#start_times[@]}; i++)); do
 start_time=${start_times[$i]}
 end_time=${end_times[$i]}
 echo "Cutting audio file $input_file at $bpm BPM for bar $((i + 1)) ($start_time-$end_time) for $bar_duration seconds..."

 # Cut audio for current bar range using ffmpeg
 ffmpeg -i "$input_file" -ss "$start_time" -to "$end_time" -c copy "$output_file"_"$((i + 1)).${input_file##*.}" -y
 done

 # Check if the output files are empty and delete them if so
 for output_file in "${output_file}"_*; do
 if [ ! -s "$output_file" ]; then
 echo "Output file $output_file is empty. Deleting..."
 rm "$output_file"
 fi
 done

 echo "Audio cut and saved as $output_file"
}


# Main script
if [ "$#" -eq 0 ]; then
 echo "Usage: $0 [audio_file1] [audio_file2] ..."
 exit 1
fi

for file in "$@"; do
 bpm=$(get_bpm "$file")
 if [ -z "$bpm" ]; then
 echo "Error: No BPM found in filename $file"
 else
 cut_audio "$file" "$bpm"
 fi
done



Maybe its only the math calc in the beginning but idk :)


If you need more details just lmk


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Script doesnt recognize bars / length right for cutting audio , ffmpeg terminal
14 avril 2024, par totzillarbeatsThis terminal script doesn't recognize bars / length right for cutting audio, maybe somebody knows what's wrong with the calculation ...


Would be happy about any help the cutting already works !


#!/bin/bash

# Function to extract BPM from filename

get_bpm() {
 local filename="$1"
 local bpm=$(echo "$filename" | grep -oE '[0-9]{1,3}' | head -n1)
 echo "$bpm"
}

# Function to cut audio based on BPM
cut_audio() {
 local input_file="$1"
 local bpm="$2"
 local output_file="${input_file%.*}_cut.${input_file##*.}" # Appends "_cut" to original filename

 # Define the number of beats per bar (assuming 4 beats per bar)
 beats_per_bar=4

 # Calculate the duration of each bar in seconds
 bar_duration=$((60 * beats_per_bar / bpm))

 # Define start and end times for each bar range
 start_times=(0 21 33 45 57 69 81 93 105 117 129 141)
 end_times=(20 29 41 53 65 77 89 101 113 125 137 149)

 # Iterate through each bar range
 for ((i = 0; i < ${#start_times[@]}; i++)); do
 start_time=${start_times[$i]}
 end_time=${end_times[$i]}
 echo "Cutting audio file $input_file at $bpm BPM for bar $((i + 1)) ($start_time-$end_time) for $bar_duration seconds..."

 # Cut audio for current bar range using ffmpeg
 ffmpeg -i "$input_file" -ss "$start_time" -to "$end_time" -c copy "$output_file"_"$((i + 1)).${input_file##*.}" -y
 done

 # Check if the output files are empty and delete them if so
 for output_file in "${output_file}"_*; do
 if [ ! -s "$output_file" ]; then
 echo "Output file $output_file is empty. Deleting..."
 rm "$output_file"
 fi
 done

 echo "Audio cut and saved as $output_file"
}


# Main script
if [ "$#" -eq 0 ]; then
 echo "Usage: $0 [audio_file1] [audio_file2] ..."
 exit 1
fi

for file in "$@"; do
 bpm=$(get_bpm "$file")
 if [ -z "$bpm" ]; then
 echo "Error: No BPM found in filename $file"
 else
 cut_audio "$file" "$bpm"
 fi
done



Maybe its only the math calc in the beginning but idk :)


If you need more details just lmk


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aarch64 : cabac_encode_{decision,bypass,terminal}_asm
19 novembre 2014, par Janne Grunauaarch64 : cabac_encode_decision,bypass,terminal_asm
benchmarks on a Nexus 9 (nvidia denver) :
101.3 cycles in x264_cabac_encode_decision_c, 67105369 runs, 3495 skips
97.3 cycles in x264_cabac_encode_decision_asm, 67105493 runs, 3371 skips
132.8 cycles in x264_cabac_encode_terminal_c, 1046950 runs, 1626 skips
116.1 cycles in x264_cabac_encode_terminal_asm, 1048424 runs, 152 skips
92.4 cycles in x264_cabac_encode_bypass_c, 16776192 runs, 1024 skips
89.6 cycles in x264_cabac_encode_bypass_asm, 16776453 runs, 763 skipsCycle counts are not as stable as one would like. The dynamic code
optimisation seems to produce different results for small chnages in a
binary. Repeated runs with the same binary produce stable results
though (ignoring the first run).