Chris,

Thanks for responding. I think that it is actually a different problem now.
I am using Prezi to create a slideshow. It seems no matter what I set the
framerate to with swftools to .5, for example and, when I load the file in
Prezi, it always appears at the same rate.

Is it also possible that there is a difference in setting a zero before the
decimal? Also, I noticed that your -r option was placed before the -o
option. Can options be placed in any order within their section of the line?

I am running swftools under Linux.

While I have you... Have you used swftools to create an swf from an audio
file?

Thanks for your help.

Ande


On Sat, Feb 5, 2011 at 12:13 PM, Chris Pugh <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Sat, 5 Feb 2011 09:37:59 -0600
> Anderson Reinkordt <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > I understand that, to create an SWF from a set of PNGs, the following
> basic
> > command works:
> >
> > *png2swf -o pngmovie.swf image1.png image2.png image3.png*
> > *
> > *
> > My question has to do with the *framerate* option. I understand that I
> the
> > option for this is *-r [framerate in framespersecond]*, so:
> >
> > png2swf -o pngmovie.swf -r 10 image1.png image2.png image3.png
> >
> > My question is; how to I describe the value as less than 1 fps? For what
> I
> > am trying to do, this is too fast. Using decimals did not seem to work.
> Is
> > there a specific way or is this possible? Am I missing something on the
> > manpage?
> >
> > I will keep plugging away. Any feedback would be much appreciated!
>
> It does seems to be a wee bit uncertain sometimes, but, the decimal point
> works aok for me, i.e.
>
>     png2swf -r 0.1 -o combined.swf ?.swf
>
> ( this was under linux ).
>
> Does your install not let you specify the command this way??
>
> Regards,
>
>
> Chris.
>

Reply via email to