On 08/10/16 23:24, Xen wrote:
Is there any way in Linux to obtain an accurate frame/time number through a GUI that can be used with ffmpeg?

I know Avidemux hardly works at all, VLC will not reliably show frames.

Pitivi is not an option, I haven't tried Kdenlive because it crashed the first time I used it.

Haven't attempted OpenShot or Cinerella and "DragonPlayer" is too worthless to exist.

What is a good tool to view results after you've created a video? Because VLC closes its window and constantly resizes stuff it is not very suitable.

GMplayer in Debian doesn't work. (Kubuntu).

Regards.
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Don't call the work of others "too worthless to exist". Your rudeness is uncalled for.

VLC doesn't have to skip frames but drops them as a feature to hurry up the playback. You'll find it in its many advanced options. If its about viewing a video frame by frame then you can reconfigure the GUI of VLC to include a button for it. You'll find a keyboard shortcut for it, too.

My preferred player is mpv - simple, fast and yet powerful options. You can watch a video frame by frame with , and . in single steps. When you start it from the command line with --osd-fractions will it show an exact time code down to milliseconds on the console.

$ apt-get install mpv


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