Thanks Larry, works perfectly :)!

Any chance of getting the value of other data such as width/height/timecode
as well? Or maybe that is outside the scope of oiiotool?

Best regards,
Simon



-------------------------------
Simon Björk
Compositor/TD

+46 (0)70-2859503
www.bjorkvisuals.com


2014-08-13 21:11 GMT+02:00 Larry Gritz <[email protected]>:

> Just use # in the string!
>
>
>
> On August 13, 2014 11:20:46 AM PDT, "Simon Björk" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>>
>> Hi Pete,
>>
>> thanks for your reply and example!
>>
>> Yes, the --text option seems to do what I need - when working on a single
>> image. But what about a sequence? Is there a way for the --text option to
>> evalutate the current frame number somehow? Something like:
>>
>> oiiotool input.#.dpx --frames 1-100 --text <current frame number> -o
>> output.#.jpeg
>>
>> Best regards,
>> Simon
>>
>>
>>
>> -------------------------------
>> Simon Björk
>> Compositor/TD
>>
>> +46 (0)70-2859503
>> www.bjorkvisuals.com
>>
>>
>> 2014-08-13 17:24 GMT+02:00 Pete Black <[email protected]>:
>>
>>> Hi Simon,
>>>
>>> Looking at oiiotools's options, --text function should indeed do what
>>> you want.
>>>
>>> Heres a post from the list with more detail:
>>>
>>> http://comments.gmane.org/gmane.comp.lib.openimageio.devel/1371
>>>
>>> One thing missing from the oiiotool usage info is how to encode color in
>>> the argument string.
>>>
>>> an example:
>>>
>>> oiiotool
>>> <infile>--text:x=100:y=100:color=1.0,0.0,0.0:size=32:font="Arial.ttf"
>>> "01:00:00:00" --text:x=500:y=100:color=1.0,1.0.1.0:size=32:font="Arial.ttf"
>>> "SHOTNAME" -o <outfile>
>>>
>>>
>>> Personally, I have my own set of wrappers around OIIO that I use (using
>>> the C++ API directly) for sequence processing/burnins, but oiiotool should
>>> be quite functional for this.
>>>
>>> Hope that helps,
>>>
>>> -Pete
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On 13/08/2014, at 3:24 am, Simon Björk <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>> > Hi all,
>>> >
>>> > I just recently switched to using OpenImageIO (oiiotool) when
>>> converting dpx/exr sequences to jpegs (dailies). It all works very well,
>>> especially with the close relationship with OpenColorIO.
>>> >
>>> > One thing I haven't found a way to do though, is to add text burn-ins
>>> such as frame number and timecode. In the doc I see there is a --text
>>> option, but I'm not sure if it's ment for such usage. Is there a way to do
>>> this? If not, how are other handling this?
>>> >
>>> > Best regards,
>>> > Simon
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > -------------------------------
>>> > Simon Björk
>>> > Compositor/TD
>>> >
>>> > +46 (0)70-2859503
>>> > www.bjorkvisuals.com
>>> > _______________________________________________
>>> > Oiio-dev mailing list
>>> > [email protected]
>>> > http://lists.openimageio.org/listinfo.cgi/oiio-dev-openimageio.org
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
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>>>
>>
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>>
> --
> Larry Gritz
> [email protected]
>
> _______________________________________________
> Oiio-dev mailing list
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>
>
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