Am Sa., 18. Apr. 2020 um 21:32 Uhr schrieb Mark Filipak <[email protected]>:
> Regarding deinterlace, Carl Eugen, I'm not trying to deinterlace. pp=linblenddeint is a (very simple) deinterlacer, once upon a time it was the preferred deinterlacer for some users, possibly because of its low performance requirements. telecine=pattern=5 produces one interlaced frame out of five (assuming non-static input). Carl Eugen PS: Note that you have a different definition of "interlaced" than FFmpeg due to the fact that you only think of analogue video transmission which FFmpeg does not support. FFmpeg can only deal with digital video frames, so "interlace" within FFmpeg is not a process but a property of (some) frames. I believe you call this property "combing". Or in other words: FFmpeg does not offer any explicit "deinterlacing" capabilities, only different filters for decombing that we call deinterlacers (like linblenddeint, bwdif and yadif). PPS: I know very well that even inside FFmpeg there are several definitions of "interlaced frames". But since we discuss filters in an FFmpeg filter chain, neither decoding field-encoded mpeg2video or paff streams nor mbaff or ildct encoding are relevant, only the actual content of single frames is which can be progressive or interlaced (for you: "not combed" or "combed") which is - in theory and to a very large degree in practice - independent of the encoding method. _______________________________________________ ffmpeg-user mailing list [email protected] https://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-user To unsubscribe, visit link above, or email [email protected] with subject "unsubscribe".
