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authorClément Bœsch <u@pkh.me>2013-09-24 21:42:21 +0200
committerClément Bœsch <u@pkh.me>2013-09-29 23:31:12 +0200
commit2e798c6ce0b4ee16b26e7658216d360670375120 (patch)
tree13b0096608fa146ba621a008485733a2f5a89660 /doc/faq.texi
parenteafb9c52e80c7b14906b362441eda0464b7b42c4 (diff)
doc/faq: remove indent in examples.
CSS should take care of this.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/faq.texi')
-rw-r--r--doc/faq.texi20
1 files changed, 10 insertions, 10 deletions
diff --git a/doc/faq.texi b/doc/faq.texi
index 957270133d..0bad57d191 100644
--- a/doc/faq.texi
+++ b/doc/faq.texi
@@ -105,7 +105,7 @@ For example, img1.jpg, img2.jpg, img3.jpg,...
Then you may run:
@example
- ffmpeg -f image2 -i img%d.jpg /tmp/a.mpg
+ffmpeg -f image2 -i img%d.jpg /tmp/a.mpg
@end example
Notice that @samp{%d} is replaced by the image number.
@@ -118,7 +118,7 @@ the sequence. This is useful if your sequence does not start with
example will start with @file{img100.jpg}:
@example
- ffmpeg -f image2 -start_number 100 -i img%d.jpg /tmp/a.mpg
+ffmpeg -f image2 -start_number 100 -i img%d.jpg /tmp/a.mpg
@end example
If you have large number of pictures to rename, you can use the
@@ -128,7 +128,7 @@ that match @code{*jpg} to the @file{/tmp} directory in the sequence of
@file{img001.jpg}, @file{img002.jpg} and so on.
@example
- x=1; for i in *jpg; do counter=$(printf %03d $x); ln -s "$i" /tmp/img"$counter".jpg; x=$(($x+1)); done
+x=1; for i in *jpg; do counter=$(printf %03d $x); ln -s "$i" /tmp/img"$counter".jpg; x=$(($x+1)); done
@end example
If you want to sequence them by oldest modified first, substitute
@@ -137,7 +137,7 @@ If you want to sequence them by oldest modified first, substitute
Then run:
@example
- ffmpeg -f image2 -i /tmp/img%03d.jpg /tmp/a.mpg
+ffmpeg -f image2 -i /tmp/img%03d.jpg /tmp/a.mpg
@end example
The same logic is used for any image format that ffmpeg reads.
@@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ The same logic is used for any image format that ffmpeg reads.
You can also use @command{cat} to pipe images to ffmpeg:
@example
- cat *.jpg | ffmpeg -f image2pipe -c:v mjpeg -i - output.mpg
+cat *.jpg | ffmpeg -f image2pipe -c:v mjpeg -i - output.mpg
@end example
@section How do I encode movie to single pictures?
@@ -153,7 +153,7 @@ You can also use @command{cat} to pipe images to ffmpeg:
Use:
@example
- ffmpeg -i movie.mpg movie%d.jpg
+ffmpeg -i movie.mpg movie%d.jpg
@end example
The @file{movie.mpg} used as input will be converted to
@@ -169,7 +169,7 @@ to force the encoding.
Applying that to the previous example:
@example
- ffmpeg -i movie.mpg -f image2 -c:v mjpeg menu%d.jpg
+ffmpeg -i movie.mpg -f image2 -c:v mjpeg menu%d.jpg
@end example
Beware that there is no "jpeg" codec. Use "mjpeg" instead.
@@ -227,11 +227,11 @@ then you may use any file that DirectShow can read as input.
Just create an "input.avs" text file with this single line ...
@example
- DirectShowSource("C:\path to your file\yourfile.asf")
+DirectShowSource("C:\path to your file\yourfile.asf")
@end example
... and then feed that text file to ffmpeg:
@example
- ffmpeg -i input.avs
+ffmpeg -i input.avs
@end example
For ANY other help on AviSynth, please visit the
@@ -497,7 +497,7 @@ An easy way to get the full list of required libraries in dependency order
is to use @code{pkg-config}.
@example
- c99 -o program program.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libavformat libavcodec)
+c99 -o program program.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs libavformat libavcodec)
@end example
See @file{doc/example/Makefile} and @file{doc/example/pc-uninstalled} for