FFmpeg-SIXEL
Gin
FFmpeg-SIXEL | Gin | |
---|---|---|
3 | 2 | |
119 | 262 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 8.4 | |
about 7 years ago | about 1 month ago | |
C | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License |
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FFmpeg-SIXEL
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A command line tool that draw plots on the terminal
Also:
https://github.com/saitoha/libsixel
contains img2sixel, which lets you dump images to the terminal. It can also do animated GIFs.
Video:
https://github.com/saitoha/FFmpeg-SIXEL
GUI apps:
https://github.com/saitoha/SDL1.2-SIXEL
and more, linked from the libsixel repository.
- Would it be possible to create a ascii movie player that runs entirely in the terminal?
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Using ASCII waveforms to test real-time audio code
> I don’t see why sixels couldn’t work.
Sixels will work: they are fast enough to allow youtube video playback !!!
https://github.com/saitoha/FFmpeg-SIXEL/blob/sixel/README.md
But the problem is NOT THE FORMAT, the problem is the lack of tooling. links and w3m are among the rare text browsers that can display images in the console.
It's just a matter of the browser sending the image to something in some format, but if that hasn't be thought about as a possibility (say, for text reflow issues) it's going to be far more complicated than just adding a new format, as you will have to work both on say the text reflow issues (ex: how do you select the size of the placeholder, when expressed in characters?), and the picture display.
Personally, I do not care much about sixels, kitty or iterm format - all I want is to see some kind of support.
Yes, it would be better if that support was for the option that has the greatest chance of succeeding, but even that is a second concern: in the worst case, we can write transcoders to whatever format people prefer!
But when there is no "input" to transcode, you have a much bigger problem!
> an off the shelf ASCII plotting library probably involves less custom tooling
With a terminal like msys2 or xterm, no custom tooling is required: just use the regular gnuplot after doing the export for the desired resolution, font, and font size.
gnuplot is far more standard than plotting library that often require special Unicode fonts on top of requiring you to use their specific format.
Gin
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Using ASCII waveforms to test real-time audio code
I was inspired by your work to do a juce implementation: https://github.com/FigBug/Gin/commit/30aa84130f4f607bdeba538b9c6c28b2dfa971bc
I was inspired by your work to do a juce implementation: https://github.com/FigBug/Gin/commit/30aa84130f4f607bdeba538...
I think the most useful thing for me is I can call it from lldb and immediately dump buffers to my terminal while debugging.
What are some alternatives?
sixel-tmux - sixel-tmux is a fork of tmux, with just one goal: having the most reliable support of graphics
melatonin_audio_sparklines - Sparklines For JUCE AudioBlocks
pamplejuce - A JUCE audio plugin template. JUCE 8, Catch2, Pluginval, macOS notarization, Azure Trusted Signing, Github Actions
plotille - Plot in the terminal using braille dots.
FYampaSynth - Modular Synthesizer Programming in F#
ttyplot - a realtime plotting utility for terminal/console with data input from stdin
SDL1.2-SIXEL - SDL 1.2 with libsixel based video driver
lsix - Like "ls", but for images. Shows thumbnails in terminal using sixel graphics.
plotext - plotting on terminal
hbook - Text-based histograms in Common Lisp inspired by the venerable HBOOK histogramming library from CERN.