![]() Due to the taxing nature of some of these visualizations, your computer may not be able to preview with FFplay in a completely seamless fashion (prepare for the possibility of laggy playback).īut fear not: you should be able to at least get a sense of how your art will look, and these delays will not carry over into your resulting files.Īll scripts also come equipped with built-in help instructions, which can be pulled up with a -h flag. Nearly all of the scripts offer users two main paths: previewing the manipulated video with FFplay or saving directly to a file with FFmpeg. If you see different help notes, error messages, or FFmpeg output than the presenter, that’s ok. The scripts also print different information as output. If the presenter is using a Mac and you’re using a PC, when they type script.sh, you should type script.ps1. ![]() We tried to make these versions act as similarly as possible, but you will notice some slight differences. We have created Bash versions (for Mac and Linux users) and Powershell versions (for Windows users) of all scripts. ![]() Instructions for FFmpeg Scripts Table of contents ![]()
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