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::Selfilter "file_";
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::SelfilterX "file_";
Also, I'm not finding a way to append selections/different patterns to selfilter. Is it possible? How?
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::Selfilter "file_";
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::SelfilterX "file_";
Well reading the help helps sometimes:SkyFrontier wrote:Selfilter could distinguish between "file_", "file_01" and "file_02" (eXact match)?
Also, I'm not finding a way to append selections/different patterns to selfilter.
Is it possible? How?
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Scripting Commands Reference
selfilter """readme""";
Selects item named "readme" and only that one item.
Just bringing the term "CD-ROM" into the present, since I doubt there are that many CD drives still around.admin wrote:Optical? I'm not aware of a flag to test that.
Ah, as a cover for CD, DVD, and Blu-ray drives. Ok. But even under Win7 my DVD drive is still labeled "CD drive".TheQwerty wrote:Just bringing the term "CD-ROM" into the present, since I doubt there are that many CD drives still around.admin wrote:Optical? I'm not aware of a flag to test that.
Well you can call it whatever you like, if Windows 7 is still calling them CD drives then so be it. (Though anyone have word from Windows 8?)admin wrote:Ah, as a cover for CD, DVD, and Blu-ray drives. Ok. But even under Win7 my DVD drive is still labeled "CD drive".
Heritage. Who uses "Computers" for computing nowadays? Not the masses...TheQwerty wrote:Well you can call it whatever you like, if Windows 7 is still calling them CD drives then so be it. (Though anyone have word from Windows 8?)admin wrote:Ah, as a cover for CD, DVD, and Blu-ray drives. Ok. But even under Win7 my DVD drive is still labeled "CD drive".
Personally, I feel it's silly to continue to call them CD-ROMs just because Microsoft weren't forward thinking when they created the drive type enum.
Right up there with the standard floppy disk icon for Save.admin wrote:Heritage. Who uses "Computers" for computing nowadays? Not the masses...
By way of a possible workaround, MediaInfo claims to be able to export its information to CSV among other formats. It has a command-line version, but I'm not sure how scriptable it is.zer0 wrote:I desperately need a way to determine frame width and height of video files. When I preview such a file, I can see that information in the area in the top right corner of the preview panel, but how do I retrieve it using scripting. There does not seem to be a set of arguments that I can use with property() to grab it
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$FFmpegLog = readfile($FFmpegLogFile);
foreach($Line, $FFmpegLog, "<crlf>"){
$FindVideoResolution = regexreplace($Line, "(.+?)(\d+[x|X]\d+)(.+)", "$2");
if($FindVideoResolution != $Line) { $SourceVideoResolution = $FindVideoResolution; }
}
$SourceVideoWidth = gettoken($SourceVideoResolution, 1, "x");
$SourceVideoHeight = gettoken($SourceVideoResolution, 2, "x");
text Resolution: $SourceVideoWidth x $SourceVideoHeight;
Thank you for a potential workaround. I would rather Don makes it possible through scripting, which should be a trivial exercise.highend wrote:I do this with the help of ffmpeg (in a greater context for my video convert script).