barsbas.blogg.se

Mkvtoolnix gui split files
Mkvtoolnix gui split files








One with this at the end as before:Īnd another containing the last 50 frames I don't want. I generally go one step further and after splitting the first 900 frames I'd encode the rest using two scripts. When that's done you'd have a split section that's the first 900 frames and a re-encode of the next 50 frames you can append together with MKVToolNixGUI. That being the case, I'd split on 900 and then re-encode the next 50 frames by putting Trim() at the end of the script. The problem is, in this example the last keyframe is frame 900 so you can't split on 950. You encode it all but later realise you want to discard the last 50 frames. That way, if you need to split where there's no keyframe you can split a bit earlier and then re-encode just a small section of video. What program are you using for encoding these days? For the x264 encoder if you always use -stitchable in the command line (or have it checked in the program's encoder configuration) it'll ensure you can always join encoded video together (as long as it's the same resolution and the same encoder settings were used). For fade-ins and fade-outs though, where there's no major change from one frame to the next (as happens on a scene change) that's not necessarily the case. That's the maximum, but the encoder is also good at putting them on the first frame of a scene, so often they're exactly where you need them for cutting. For the x264 encoder, the "maximum" distance between keyframes is 10 seconds by default. I'm pretty sure DVDShrink is still limited to keyframe cutting, but for mpeg2 video the keyframes are generally much closer together.










Mkvtoolnix gui split files