If you happen to be on macOS AND you happen to still have a license for 
Quicktime 7 Pro, that will also create a movie from the images. You can export 
in whatever format that Quicktime supports.

--
Michael Jackson | Owner, President
      BlueQuartz Software
[e] mike.jack...@bluequartz.net
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-----Original Message-----
From: ParaView <paraview-boun...@public.kitware.com> on behalf of "Scott, W 
Alan via ParaView" <paraview@public.kitware.com>
Reply-To: "Scott, W Alan" <wasc...@sandia.gov>
Date: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 at 9:51 PM
To: Francesco Poli <invernom...@paranoici.org>, "Ayachit, Utkarsh (External 
Contacts)" <utkarsh.ayac...@kitware.com>
Cc: ParaView <parav...@paraview.org>
Subject: Re: [Paraview] [EXTERNAL] Re:  Screenshots to movies

    Francesco,
    
    There was a known bug/feature in the .avi writer in ParaView 5.4.1, where 
it wrote a version of .avi that was not compatible with the OS X Quicktime 
player (the OS X default) and the Windows Media player.  This has been 
corrected in ParaView 5.5.0.  (I just tested them on my MacBook.)
    
    Alan
    
    
    On 5/15/18, 4:42 PM, "Francesco Poli" <invernom...@paranoici.org> wrote:
    
        On Tue, 15 May 2018 13:11:59 -0400 Utkarsh Ayachit wrote:
        
        > ffmeg is your friend on linux. It needs a little figuring things out, 
but
        > both resizing images and then converting them to videos is possible.
        
        ParaView used to also be able to save animations as MJPEG AVI
        (.avi) files.
        
        Unfortunately, the version currently in Debian GNU/Linux (unstable and
        testing) seems to have a regression and is unable to save .avi files.
        See my [bug report](https://bugs.debian.org/892293) on the Debian BTS...
        
        My current workaround is:
        
         → save animations as PNG images
        
         → convert them with
        
           $ ffmpeg -f image2 -framerate 5 -i input.%04d.png \
                    -vcodec mjpeg -pix_fmt yuv420p -q:v 3 output.avi
        
        
        Please note that ParaView used to save .avi files with pixel format
        yuvj422p (until it stopped doing so, because of the above mentioned
        regression), but I started to use pixel format yuv420p, to work around
        a [bug](https://bugs.debian.org/863663) in GStreamer.
        With this pixel format the animation may be correctly played by
        GStreamer on GNU/Linux and hence, when embedded in a PDF page, by
        pdf-presenter-console on GNU/Linux, as well as by Acrobat Reader DC on
        Windows...
        
        If anyone knows any better strategy, comments are welcome!
        
        
        -- 
         http://www.inventati.org/frx/
         There's not a second to spare! To the laboratory!
        ..................................................... Francesco Poli .
         GnuPG key fpr == CA01 1147 9CD2 EFDF FB82  3925 3E1C 27E1 1F69 BFFE
        
    
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