From: Good Guy Date: Fri, 2 Apr 2021 16:05:07 +0000 (-0600) Subject: Andrea added new HV plugins X-Git-Tag: 2021-05~7 X-Git-Url: https://git.cinelerra-gg.org/git/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=36019fed4ba28ac79b4930894eca97bfd9d645f0;p=goodguy%2Fcin-manual-latex.git Andrea added new HV plugins --- diff --git a/parts/Installation.tex b/parts/Installation.tex index 39346f4..696bb0c 100644 --- a/parts/Installation.tex +++ b/parts/Installation.tex @@ -6,6 +6,10 @@ \label{sec:cin_gg_appimage} The main way to install \CGG{} is to use the AppImage. This is updated regularly and works for every distro, since it already contains the necessary dependencies. +A big advantage of using the AppImage format is that it is only 1/3 the size of the normal install, +and since each release is named differently, you can keep a number of versions in a directory, +and when testing from a terminal you just have to type CinGG, then hit tab, and complete it to +the desired date release. For 64-bit systems you can choose between an image with up-to-date libraries or one that supports older libraries, which you should use only if the first image gives you problems with unsupported libs. There is also a 32-bit older distro available that has \textit{i686} as part of the filename. Installing the appimage is simple: diff --git a/parts/Plugins.tex b/parts/Plugins.tex index c86f1ed..6878965 100644 --- a/parts/Plugins.tex +++ b/parts/Plugins.tex @@ -510,7 +510,7 @@ Audio sampling (time data) is converted to a frequency spectrum using FFT (\text For example, if you record a voice with a microphone\protect\footnote{credit fary54}: \begin{enumerate} - \item You record 15 seconds of background (without talking). This is represent the background noise that the filter uses as a reference.. + \item You record 15 seconds of background (without talking). This is represent the background noise that the filter uses as a reference. \item After 15 seconds, start the voice. This is represents the recording whose filter should remove the background noise. \item You stop recording. \item You place the FFT effect on the whole length of the recording (including the 15 seconds of background noise). @@ -2565,6 +2565,12 @@ position a little so that the answers are not exactly zero. The \textit{Polar} effect bends and warps your video in weird ways. Mathematically, it converts your video from either \textit{polar} coordinates to \textit{rectangular} coordinates, or the reverse. With the Clear buttons we can bring the slider to default values without affecting the other parameters. +\subsection{Posterize}% +\label{sub:posterize} +\index{posterize} + +Reduces the color depth so as to decrease the displayed color gradients, up to the bands typical of posterization. It is used by setting the number of \textit{steps} from 0 to 255. + \subsection{RGB-601}% \label{sub:rgb-601} \index{rgb-601} @@ -3026,6 +3032,12 @@ With \textit{Time Range} we decide the size (and therefore the number) of the ba \textit{Rate} allows you to choose the type of algorithm to use when switching between the start and end bands. You can reverse the direction with the \textit{Invers} button. The three modes are: \textit{Linear}, \textit{Log} or \textit{Quadratic} (exponential). This is a warping framework plugin based on this article: {\small \url{http://www.vision.huji.ac.il/videowarping/HUJI-CSE-LTR-2005-10_etf-tr.pdf}} +\subsection{Timelapse Helper}% +\label{sub:timelapse_helper} +\index{timelapse helper} + +It is used to get a timelapse quickly and easily. It sets the number of frames to be skipped during playback. The default value of \textit{Number of Frames x block} is 10; playback (and rendering) displays frames 1 - 10 - 20 - ... and not the intermediate ones. + \subsection{Title}% \label{sub:title} \index{title} @@ -3670,13 +3682,13 @@ cin/plugins/opencv/stylizeobj.plugin The location for most User installs is: -\hspace{4em}\texttt{/plugins/} +\hspace{4em}\texttt{/plugins/video} Location for some System installs is: -\hspace{4em}\texttt{/usr/lib/cin/plugins/} (most ubuntu distros) +\hspace{4em}\texttt{/usr/lib/cin/plugins/video} (most ubuntu distros) -\hspace{4em}\texttt{/usr/lib64/cin/plugins/} (Leap distro) +\hspace{4em}\texttt{/usr/lib64/cin/plugins/video} (Leap distro) \subsection{How to Build OpenCV Plugins}% \label{sub:how_build_opencv_plugins}