The timestamp can be turned off or moved to various locations, but it might be nice to specify how detailed it is. As long as a video is under an hour long and probably nobody's going to need to quickly locate a specific frame, 02:38 is more quickly readable than 0:02:38,158.
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Thanks for your suggestion. I think that's a good idea so I have updated
the feature this morning by removing the milliseconds from the relatively
large video files. In small video files the milliseconds will be remained.
It's a cosmetic update so I've just committed to the github repo without a
downloadable release. I'll make the downloadable release with other updates
later.
The timestamp can be turned off or moved to various locations, but it
might be nice to specify how detailed it is. As long as a video is under an
hour long and probably nobody's going to need to quickly locate a specific
frame, 02:38 is more quickly readable than 0:02:38,158.
The timestamp can be turned off or moved to various locations, but it might be nice to specify how detailed it is. As long as a video is under an hour long and probably nobody's going to need to quickly locate a specific frame, 02:38 is more quickly readable than 0:02:38,158.
Hi Joshua,
Thanks for your suggestion. I think that's a good idea so I have updated
the feature this morning by removing the milliseconds from the relatively
large video files. In small video files the milliseconds will be remained.
It's a cosmetic update so I've just committed to the github repo without a
downloadable release. I'll make the downloadable release with other updates
later.
Kind regards
Andy
On Wed, Mar 28, 2018 at 9:32 AM, Joshua J. Slone joshuajslone@users.sourceforge.net wrote:
Thank you.