From: Christian B. <ein...@do...> - 2002-10-05 19:10:02
|
Am Samstag, 5. Oktober 2002 19:46 schrieben Sie: > > Something like that. A couple of points for if you are creating test > files by hand : > > Unlike in HTML, all attributes are quoted. Also, all tags should be > closed. > > So, for example, the file lines would read : > > <file filename="test.mov" start="32" speed="1"></file> > > or > > <file filename="test.mpeg" start="0" speed="0.2"/> > Ohh sorry, I forgot. > Note that the way things are set up above, you will end up with > something looking like this for more complex mixes with multiple > effects: > > <scene name="some scene" length="30"> > <fade start="100" end="0"> > <colorgen color="#000000"/> > <overlay type="screen"> > <text color="#FFFFFF" x="centered" y="bottom"> > A Kdenlive Production MMII > </text> > <file filename="test.mpeg" start="0" speed="1"/> > </overlay> > </fade> > </scene> > > In this example, some text being overlayed onto some video would fade to > black. I see, and the text would of course fade with the video. One little problem I see here is that the 2 videos aren't clearly "numbered". I hope the order of tags is important in XML > > If that's not to hard to be used in the XML parser > > If it's anything like the QT one, the parser will do everything for you, > leaving you with a tree of XMLNodes in memory, which you can then > traverse to pick out what you need from it. I see, this should be decently easy then. I'll try to come up with some concepts. > Cheers, > Jason Servus Casandro -- Warning! (this is no commercial ad) This e-mail probably will be read by secret services. Therefore please get pgp or gnupg and send me your public key so we e-mail encryptedly. http://www.gnupg.org/ |