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Keeping control of your media in your hands
13 April 2011, byThe vocabulary used on this site and around MediaSPIP in general, aims to avoid reference to Web 2.0 and the companies that profit from media-sharing.
While using MediaSPIP, you are invited to avoid using words like "Brand", "Cloud" and "Market".
MediaSPIP is designed to facilitate the sharing of creative media online, while allowing authors to retain complete control of their work.
MediaSPIP aims to be accessible to as many people as possible and development is based on expanding the (...) -
Les images
15 May 2013 -
Taille des images et des logos définissables
9 February 2011, byDans beaucoup d’endroits du site, logos et images sont redimensionnées pour correspondre aux emplacements définis par les thèmes. L’ensemble des ces tailles pouvant changer d’un thème à un autre peuvent être définies directement dans le thème et éviter ainsi à l’utilisateur de devoir les configurer manuellement après avoir changé l’apparence de son site.
Ces tailles d’images sont également disponibles dans la configuration spécifique de MediaSPIP Core. La taille maximale du logo du site en pixels, on permet (...)
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Can't open ffmpeg output with quicktime, pix_fmt flag doesn't fix it
13 November 2019, by kilojoulesQuicktime can’t read the output of
ffmpeg
when I try making an animation. It uploads to imgur and plays no problem. A previous thread recommended that I add the-pix_fmt yuv420p
flag. But, on my system, that does not work.ffmpeg
runs without error when I exclude thepix_fmt
flag, but I cannot open the output animation in quicktime.Why won’t quicktime open the animation? How can I make the animation open with quicktime?
$ ffmpeg -y -i animation/tigers_${ii}_%05d.png -pix_fmt yuv420p tiger${ii}.mp4
ffmpeg version 4.0.2 Copyright (c) 2000-2018 the FFmpeg developers
built with Apple LLVM version 8.0.0 (clang-800.0.42.1)
configuration: --prefix=/usr/local/Cellar/ffmpeg/4.0.2 --enable-shared --enable-pthreads --enable-version3 --enable-hardcoded-tables --enable-avresample --cc=clang --host-cflags= --host-ldflags= --enable-gpl --enable-libmp3lame --enable-libx264 --enable-libxvid --enable-opencl --enable-videotoolbox --disable-lzma
libavutil 56. 14.100 / 56. 14.100
libavcodec 58. 18.100 / 58. 18.100
libavformat 58. 12.100 / 58. 12.100
libavdevice 58. 3.100 / 58. 3.100
libavfilter 7. 16.100 / 7. 16.100
libavresample 4. 0. 0 / 4. 0. 0
libswscale 5. 1.100 / 5. 1.100
libswresample 3. 1.100 / 3. 1.100
libpostproc 55. 1.100 / 55. 1.100
Input #0, image2, from 'animation/tigers_1.10_%05d.png':
Duration: 00:00:08.32, start: 0.000000, bitrate: N/A
Stream #0:0: Video: png, rgba(pc), 2023x3036 [SAR 17716:17716 DAR 2023:3036], 25 fps, 25 tbr, 25 tbn, 25 tbc
Stream mapping:
Stream #0:0 -> #0:0 (png (native) -> h264 (libx264))
Press [q] to stop, [?] for help
[libx264 @ 0x7fdd7b800c00] width not divisible by 2 (2023x3036)
Error initializing output stream 0:0 -- Error while opening encoder for output stream #0:0 - maybe incorrect parameters such as bit_rate, rate, width or height
Conversion failed! -
av::av_encode_video produces blurred video from crisp files
9 January 2023, by AbdirizakI am using the
av::av_encode_video()
function to produce a .mp4 video from png files, as in this answer. I pay special attention for the png files to be perfectly crisp, i.e. I plot matrices to png with exactly the same dimensions, so that every matrix cell maps to one cell in the png. Here is code to illustrate what I mean:

library(av)

n.times <- 24*10
n.row <- 50
n.col <- 26

out.dir <- "/Users/Abdirizak/Documents/some/directory/"

for (i in 1:n.times) {
 
 current.mat <- matrix(data = rnorm(n.row*n.col), nrow = n.row, ncol = n.col)
 
 setwd(out.dir)
 png(filename = paste0(i, ".png"), width = n.row, height = n.col)
 
 par(mar = rep(0,4))
 image(current.mat)
 
 dev.off()
 
}

setwd(out.dir)
png.files <- paste0(out.dir, list.files(pattern = ".png$"))

av::av_encode_video(input = png.files, output = "000.mp4", framerate = 24)



Now, even though my input .png files are perfectly crisp, the output .mp4 video is blurry. How can I prevent that from happening? I.e. how can I get a perfectly crisp video? (I am aware that this will likely inflate the file size of the .mp4 file)


I already digged a bit into the
vfilter
argument ofav_encode_video()
and the underlying ffmpeg filter graphs on here, but could not yet really get the hang on it.

I am looking at the .mp4 file through QuickTime Player on MacOS Ventura 13.0.1, and using R version 4.2.2 through RStudio 2022.12.0.353


Edit 9.1.2023:


To further clarify, here is an example screenshot of a png image (not the original png file because that one appears too small here):




As I said, a perfectly crisp image.


On the other hand, a screenshot of the .mp4 movie looks like this:




Somewhat unsatisfactory. Any suggestions are welcome.


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