Otherwise I'll need to pursue the solution from a scripting perspective, of which I know nothing about. So I'm just curious if there are editors that have the kind of re-wrapping functionality that ffmpeg command prompt has. QWinFF provides an intuitive graphical interface and a rich set of presets to help you use ffmpeg easily without having to type a single command. FFmpeg can read audio and video files in various formats and convert them into other formats. The ones I have used have very limited functionality when it comes to rewrapping/'no-encoding' compared to ffmpeg command prompt, or just always re-encode to begin with. QWinFF is a GUI for FFmpeg, a powerful command-line media converter. change default editor linux Visual Studio Code ffmpeg cut video without re encoding. I don't have much experience with the modern capabilities of video editors. ffmpeg -i my-video.mov -vcodec h264 -acodec mp2 my-video.mp4. Then it just chooses the nearest i frame to my cut choices (if it displayed the i frame that would be good too) and does all the above stuff. I mean the simplest and ideal process I can think of is: I toss the videos in the editor, i click an option to disable re-encoding, i choose the sections I want. So I wanted to know if there are any gui (video editors) that support this functionality of ffmpeg in a more manageable manner. But putting all this together and checking the video after getting each piece of information.turned into a very inefficient process.
#LINUX FFMPEG VISUAL EDITOR HOW TO#
I looked up how to find the nearest i frame to try and get more accuracy when choosing times. I currently can do it by using each command separately i.e.:įfmpeg -ss 00:00:00 -i input -to 00:00:00 -c copy outputĪnd then I'd concaticate the pieces I want together.
#LINUX FFMPEG VISUAL EDITOR INSTALL#
After the update is completed, install the FFmpeg by issuing the following command. Before installing any package, it is good practice to update the system’s packages: pacman -Syu. The official package manager of Arch Linux named Pacman contains FFmpeg. I was trying to do the above with ffmpeg, but without re-encoding. How to install FFmpeg on Arch Linux using Pacman. Same as described in the link below think: removing commercials from a tv show. To illustrate: Say I want to delete the 10-11 minute point of a 20 minute video and create the new video of 19 minutes without re-encode.