I'm very confused. I've doing my best to read all the guides, but I'm having a heck of a time makes heads or tails of a lot of things. I'm using video game footage, btw.
Like, I don't understand the difference between Virtualdub and AVisynth. It's seems to me they're both used for video cleaning, so why do you need both? How do you know what resolution to use when rescaling the videos for editing. And for the final product, for that matter?
Video quality
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-vdub is a program that interprets and displays the footage that you feed it,
-it can also convert that video to other formats [via whatever codecs you have on your computer]
-normally, vdub is fed the video directly from the file containing the footage [aka your Source]
-However, Avisynth can act as a "middle-man" between your source and vdub
--it can take the source footage, and alter things like height/width/framerate/colourspace... even clean the footage via various filters... Then feed the altered footage to vdub for conversion/recompression.
more info here esp "Getting Avisynth to do its thing."
and if you are trying to put some logical order to the guides,
the Overview from the beta guide might help.
IMO, this is the greatest addition in the new guide...
-it can also convert that video to other formats [via whatever codecs you have on your computer]
-normally, vdub is fed the video directly from the file containing the footage [aka your Source]
-However, Avisynth can act as a "middle-man" between your source and vdub
--it can take the source footage, and alter things like height/width/framerate/colourspace... even clean the footage via various filters... Then feed the altered footage to vdub for conversion/recompression.
more info here esp "Getting Avisynth to do its thing."
and if you are trying to put some logical order to the guides,
the Overview from the beta guide might help.
IMO, this is the greatest addition in the new guide...
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- Phantasmagoriat
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ok, I guess it depends on the format of your source, and I've never used game footage before. But if it's possible to get the footage into vdub, then you should be able to follow the guide as if it was a regular source. I'll just take a shot in the dark and suggest loading the video into vdub through an .avs script that looks like this:
DirectShowSource("C:\path\file.xxx", audio=false, fps=23.976, convertFPS=true)
...but yeah, I guess it depends on how the footage is ripped, and
what format it's in, which might need a different method.
maybe check the threads in the Capturing and Ripping forum too
hope this helps^^
DirectShowSource("C:\path\file.xxx", audio=false, fps=23.976, convertFPS=true)
...but yeah, I guess it depends on how the footage is ripped, and
what format it's in, which might need a different method.
maybe check the threads in the Capturing and Ripping forum too
hope this helps^^
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"Effort to Understand; Effort to be Understood; to See through Different Eyes."
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