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Autres articles (49)

  • Submit bugs and patches

    13 avril 2011

    Unfortunately a software is never perfect.
    If you think you have found a bug, report it using our ticket system. Please to help us to fix it by providing the following information : the browser you are using, including the exact version as precise an explanation as possible of the problem if possible, the steps taken resulting in the problem a link to the site / page in question
    If you think you have solved the bug, fill in a ticket and attach to it a corrective patch.
    You may also (...)

  • Submit enhancements and plugins

    13 avril 2011

    If you have developed a new extension to add one or more useful features to MediaSPIP, let us know and its integration into the core MedisSPIP functionality will be considered.
    You can use the development discussion list to request for help with creating a plugin. As MediaSPIP is based on SPIP - or you can use the SPIP discussion list SPIP-Zone.

  • Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins

    27 avril 2010, par

    Mediaspip core
    autoriser_auteur_modifier() afin que les visiteurs soient capables de modifier leurs informations sur la page d’auteurs

Sur d’autres sites (8443)

  • Fill patterns

    26 avril 2008, par Mikko Koppanen — Imagick, PHP stuff

    My work life has been quite busy lately and I haven’t had a chance to sit down and blog. I have been touring around London and some parts of the northern England consulting and organizing some training here and there. Luckily I have had the chance to do some work on Imagick and the 2.2.0 beta release is getting closer. The internal structure was completely restructured and broken down into several smaller files. During this time Imagick was adapted to follow the PHP Coding Standards more closely. Still a work in progress :)

    I committed slightly modified version of this example to PHP Manual http://uk.php.net/manual/en/imagick.examples.php page a few days ago. The example illustrates using an image as a part of a named fill pattern. The fill pattern is used to annotate text but the named pattern could also be used to fill any shapes that allow fill to be specified (include circles, ellipses, rectangles, polygons etc etc). The code itself is pretty straight forward : Read the image, create the pattern and use the pattern as a fill.

    The ice formations image is from http://www.photoeverywhere.co.uk/west/winterholiday/slides/iceformations5679.htm.

    1. < ?php
    2.  
    3. /* Create a new imagick object */
    4. $im = new Imagick( ’iceformations5679.JPG’ ) ;
    5.  
    6. /* Create imagickdraw object */
    7. $draw = new ImagickDraw() ;
    8.  
    9. /* Start a new pattern called "ice" */
    10. $draw->pushPattern( ’ice’ , 0 , 0 , 50 , 50 ) ;
    11.  
    12. /* Composite the image on the pattern */
    13. $draw->composite( Imagick: :COMPOSITE_OVER, 0, 0, 50, 50, $im ) ;
    14.  
    15. /* Close the pattern */
    16. $draw->popPattern() ;
    17.  
    18. /* Use the pattern called "ice" as the fill */
    19. $draw->setFillPatternURL( ’#ice’ ) ;
    20.  
    21. /* Set font size to 52 */
    22. $draw->setFontSize( 52 ) ;
    23.  
    24. /* Annotate some text */
    25. $draw->annotation( 5, 50, "Hello World !" ) ;
    26.  
    27. /* Create a new canvas and white image */
    28. $canvas = new Imagick() ;
    29. $canvas->newImage( 310, 70, "white" ) ;
    30.  
    31. /* Add black border around the resulting image */
    32. $canvas->borderImage( ’black’, 1, 1 ) ;
    33.  
    34. /* Draw the ImagickDraw on to the canvas */
    35. $canvas->drawImage( $draw ) ;
    36.  
    37. /* Set the format to PNG */
    38. $canvas->setImageFormat( ’png’ ) ;
    39.  
    40. /* Output the image */
    41. header( "Content-Type : image/png" ) ;
    42. echo $canvas ;
    43.  ?>

    And the result is here :

  • On ALAC’s Open Sourcing

    1er novembre 2011, par Multimedia Mike — Codec Technology

    Apple open sourced their lossless audio codec last week. Pretty awesome ! I have a theory that, given enough time, absolutely every codec will be open source in one way or another.

    I know I shouldn’t bother reading internet conversation around any news related to multimedia technology. And if I do read it, I shouldn’t waste any effort getting annoyed about them. But here are some general corrections :

    • ALAC is not in the same league as — nor is it a suitable replacement for — MP3/AAC/Vorbis or any other commonly used perceptual audio codec. It’s not a matter of better or worse ; they’re just different families of codecs designed for different purposes.
    • Apple open sourced ALAC, not AAC– easy mistake, though there’s nothing to ‘open source’ about AAC (though people can, and will, argue about its absolute ‘open-ness’).
    • There’s not much technical room to argue between ALAC and FLAC, the leading open source lossless audio compressor. Both perform similarly in terms of codec speeds (screamingly fast) and compression efficiency (results vary slightly depending on source material).
    • Perhaps the most frustrating facet is the blithe ignorance about ALAC’s current open source status. While this event simply added an official “open source” status to the codec, ALAC has effectively been open source for a very long time. According to my notes, the ALAC decoding algorithm was reverse engineered in 2005 and added into FFmpeg in March of the same year. Then in 2008, Google — through their Summer of Code program — sponsored an open source ALAC encoder.

    From the multimedia-savvy who are versed in these concepts, the conversation revolves around which would win in a fight, ALAC or FLAC ? And who between Apple and FFmpeg/Libav has a faster ALAC decoder ? The faster and more efficient ALAC encoder ? I contend that these issues don’t really matter. If you have any experience working with lossless audio encoders, you know that they tend to be ridiculously fast to both encode and decode and that many different lossless codecs compress at roughly the same ratios.

    As for which encoder is the fastest : use whatever encoder is handiest and most familiar, either iTunes or FFmpeg/Libav.

    As for whether to use FLAC or ALAC — if you’ve already been using one or the other for years, keep on using it. Support isn’t going to vanish. If you’re deciding which to use for a new project, again, perhaps choose based on software you’re already familiar with. Also, consider hardware support– ALAC enjoys iPod support, FLAC is probably better supported in a variety of non-iPod devices, though that may change going forward due to this open sourcing event.

    For my part, I’m just ecstatic that the question of moral superiority based on open source status has been removed from the equation.

    Code-wise, I’m interested in studying the official ALAC code to see if it has any corner-case modes that the existing open source decoders don’t yet account for. The source makes mention of multichannel (i.e., greater than stereo) configurations, but I don’t know if that’s in FFmpeg/Libav.

  • Encode loopback capture data in mp3 using ffmpeg in VC++

    16 octobre 2013, par NetCoder89

    I'm trying to work on loopback capture(What you hear) and record this file in mp3/aac format using VC++.
    - >I can capture audio and can create a .wav file i.e. not compressed but I want a compressed file so I'm encoding this through ffmpeg to write an mp3 file not a .wav.

    However I'm not getting any way to do it directly ?
    I referred this for loopback capture.

    Please share your experience and opinions.

    Thanks !