pygvideo, video for pygame. Using moviepy video module to read and organize videos.
Project description
pygvideo
PyGVideo, video for Pygame. Using MoviePy video module to read and organize videos.
Description
PyGVideo or PyGameVideo is a Python library, particularly based on the Pygame library, for video playback or editing. You can process or edit videos and play them directly on a Pygame screen. With the MoviePy module or library, you can edit videos such as trimming, cropping, or adding effects available in MoviePy.
PyGVideo can play videos and sync audio playback. The supported formats by PyGVideo are video formats that contain audio, such as MP4, MOV, AVI, MKV, WMV, FLV, and WebM. Although MoviePy supports non-audio formats like GIF, PyGVideo currently does not support these. PyGVideo works only on Python versions >=3.10, Pygame >= 2.5.0, and MoviePy >= 1.0.3. Below is a simple usage example:
import pygame
import pygvideo
pygame.init()
pygame.mixer.init()
running = True
video = pygvideo.Video('myvideo.mp4')
screen = pygame.display.set_mode((0, 0), pygame.FULLSCREEN)
clock = pygame.time.Clock()
video_fps = video.get_fps()
video.set_size(screen.get_size())
video.prepare()
video.play(-1)
while running:
for event in pygame.event.get():
if event.type == pygame.QUIT:
running = False
video.draw_and_update(screen, (0, 0))
pygame.display.flip()
clock.tick(video_fps)
pygvideo.quit()
pygame.quit()
In fact, the MoviePy module has some fairly complex methods, and I still need to learn more about this module, so this is what I can provide for you so far :)
Installation
Installation is quite simple, you just need to use the pip method with the following command:
pip install pygvideo
Wait for the download process and for MoviePy (automatically) to be downloaded until it is complete.
Alternatively, you can also download this module from GitHub or through PyPi.
Getting started with PyGVideo
Here is a complete documentation explanation regarding PyGVideo:
Class Video
__init__
This functions similarly to VideoFileClip
in MoviePy and also includes the necessary properties for Video
. In this method, the following parameters are included:
filename_or_clip
: The video location or directly theVideoFileClip
class. Ensure the video format is compatible and supported byVideo
.target_resolution
: The target resolution. Similar to theresize
method.logger
: Logger type, consisting of:'bar'
: Displays a logger with a bar. Useful for tracking audio writing or caching.'verbose'
: Displays detailed information about events occurring inVideoFileClip
. (I’m not sure if this works).None
: No logger is displayed.
has_mask
: Loads the video with alpha or transparency support. Only available for certain video formats such as WebM.load_audio_in_prepare
: Creates or generates a temporary audio file when theprepare
method is called. If set toFalse
, the temporary audio will be loaded earlier. However, it is less recommended if you want to edit the video first before callingprepare
.cache
: When set toTrue
, this automatically stores video frames in the cache or places them in temporary frames.Video
will not need to retrieve frames fromget_frame
inVideoFileClip
. This makes the video run more smoothly.
reinit
Reload the video or refresh the video. If for example you have quited or closed the video, you can call reinit to reinitialize it.
copy
Copies an instance of Video
. All effect changes on the MoviePy clip will be copied.
get_original_clip
Retrieves the original clip instance.
get_clip
Retrieves the clip instance.
get_filename
Retrieves the video filename path.
get_temp_audio
Retrieves the temporary audio filename path.
get_total_cache_frame
Retrieves the total number of frames that have been stored in the cache.
get_original_size
Retrieves the original size of the video clip in raw form, without any clip modifications.
get_clip_size
Retrieves the original size of the video clip.
get_size
Retrieves the current video size.
get_file_size
Retrieves the video file size (uses os.path.getsize
to get the file size, so there may be slight differences, meaning this is just an estimated file size).
get_original_width
Retrieves the original width of the video clip in raw form, without any clip modifications.
get_clip_width
Retrieves the original width of the video clip.
get_width
Retrieves the current video width.
get_original_height
Retrieves the original height of the video clip in raw form, without any clip modifications.
get_clip_height
Retrieves the original height of the video clip.
get_height
Retrieves the current video height.
get_loops
Retrieves the number of loops played by the video. The loop count will reset to 0 when prepare
is called.
get_pos
Retrieves the current position of the video while it's playing. Returns a floats or a value in milliseconds, or one of the following codes:
-1
: Video is not ready.prepare
has not been called.-2
: Video has not started playing.play
has not been called.
get_alpha
Retrieves the alpha or transparency of the video.
get_duration
Retrieves the duration of the video.
get_start
Retrieves the start time of the video.
get_end
Retrieves the end time of the video.
get_total_frame
Retrieves the total number of video frames. Used this code: int(clip.duration * clip.fps)
.
get_fps
Retrieves the frames per second (fps) of the video.
get_volume
Retrieves the volume of the video.
get_frame_index
Retrieves the current frame index (while the video is playing).
get_frame
Retrieves a frame at a specific time index. The parameters are as follows:
index_time
: The time index of the frame. If you want to get the frame using a regular index, use the codex * (1 / video.get_fps())
orx * (1 / video.clip.fps)
.get_original
: To retrieve the raw frame from the clip or not.
get_frame_array
Similar to the get_frame
method but returns the frame as an array using numpy
.
iter_chunk_cache_frame
Loads the cache in the form of a generator function, allowing you to directly retrieve the frame surface and the ongoing index. This is suitable for debugging or as part of your project. Here's how to use it:
- First, create an instance of the generator:
func = video.iter_chunk_cache_frame()
- Create a loop for the generator:
for frame_surf, index, ran in func:
# your code
The generator returns yield
values as follows:
frame_surf
: The cached frame that has been saved. If the frame is completely black or blank, it means there was an error when retrieving the video frame.index
: The current cache index. (It will return a value of -1, indicating that caching is complete).ran
: The total cache range at that moment, or you can get this throughget_total_frame
.
The generator also captures messages from the generator's send
method, which, when called, will stop the generator process and display a message on the console:
Video - Done with the generator stopped. Reason: {MESSAGE FROM SEND PARAMETER}
When you call the send
function, you should also close
it with stop to properly terminate the generator. Here's an example usage:
func.send('Memory is full.')
func.close()
This will display a message on the console:
Video - Done with the generator stopped. Reason: Memory is full.
is_cache_full
Indicates whether the cache memory is full.
is_ready
Indicates whether the video is ready or prepare
has been called and is ready to play.
is_pause
Indicates whether the video is paused.
is_play
Indicates whether the video is currently playing.
is_mute
Indicates whether the video is muted.
is_quit
Indicates whether the video has exited, or quit
/ close
has been called.
is_close
Same as the is_quit
method.
draw_and_update
Updates the video while simultaneously drawing the displayed frame. This method returns the current frame surface. Here's an example usage:
frame = video.draw_and_update(SCREEN, (0, 0))
This method has several parameters:
screen_surface
: The surface on which the frame will be drawn. This is optional.pos
: The position where the frame will be drawn.
If you need to modify the video frame before it is finally drawn to the main surface, you can simply omit the parameters and store the return value of this method as follows:
frame = video.draw_and_update()
# do something with the frame surface
This method is called when the video is ready and playing.
FYI, the frame obtained is not a raw frame.
preview
Displays a preview of the video. Equivalent to the code: video.clip.preview(*args, **kwargs)
.
prepare
Prepares the video and audio. This method loads the temporary audio __temp__.mp3
/ __temp_X__.mp3
and then loads the audio into pygame.mixer.music
. It also checks whether other Video
class instances are active/ready, and if not, raises a pygame.error
. exception. This method is called after all video editing or configuration is completed so that it only needs to be played with play
.
release
Releases temporary audio resources, allowing other Video
class instances to call prepare
again.
play
Plays the video and audio. It has the following parameters:
loops
: Determines how many times the video will repeat. If set to -1 or a negative number, it will loop indefinitely.start
: Specifies the starting point for playback.
This method cannot be called before prepare
is called because the audio must be ready.
stop
Stops the video and audio.
pause
Pauses the video and audio. The difference from the stop
method is that you can still call the draw_and_update
method, and the video won't reset to 0 when you call unpause
.
unpause
Unpauses the video and audio.
mute
Mutes the audio. If you call the get_volume
method, it will return 0.
unmute
Unmutes the audio.
jump
Skips the video to a specific ratio between 0 and 1. The ratio
parameter determines the video’s skip position. For example, if you want to go to the middle of the video, you can set the parameter as ratio=0.5
or ratio=1/2
.
In addition to calling this method, you can also use the xor
operator with the ^
. syntax. For example:
# regular call
video.jump(0.5)
# calling with xor
video ^ 0.5
next
Skips the video forward by a specified time interval. The distance
parameter determines the time in seconds to skip the video.
This method can also be called using the rshift
operator with the >>
. syntax. For example:
# regular call
video.next(5)
# calling with rshift
video >> 5
previous
This method is almost the same as the next
method, except that it rewinds the video instead of skipping forward.
Similar to the next
method, you can call this with the lshift
operator using the <<
syntax. For example:
# regular call
video.previous(5)
# calling with lshift
video << 5
create_cache_frame
Creates a cache of frames. The difference between this and iter_chunk_cache_frame
is that this method is not a generator. You can set the maximum number of frames to cache by passing the max_frame
parameter as an integer or None
if you want to cache all frames.
clear_cache_frame
Deletes or clears the cache of frames. This method is called when you edit the video with custom_effect
or other Video
methods.
reset
Resets the video clip's effects back to its original state. You can call this method using the invert
operator with the ~
syntax. For example:
# regular call
video.reset()
# calling with invert
~video
custom_effect
Applies or customizes an fx
effect from MoviePy or the clip’s methods. There is an important parameter:
func
: Thefx
function or method name as a string.
The remaining parameters are the arguments or keyword arguments for the fx
function.
For xample:
# set rotation to 180 degrees with clip.rotate(180)
video.custom_effect('rotate', 180)
# method from fx
import moviepy.video.fx.all as vfx
video.custom_effect(vfx.rotate, 180)
You can directly edit the video using video.clip
, but it is strongly discouraged.
invert_colors
Inverts the video’s colors, making them negative.
grayscale
Converts the video to grayscale or black and white.
crop
Crops the video using pygame.Rect
. The rect
parameter determines the position and size of the cropped area.
Like before, this method can be called using the modulus
operator with the %
syntax. For example:
# regular call
video.crop(pygame.Rect(0, 0, 100, 100))
# calling with modulus
video % pygame.Rect(0, 0, 100, 100)
rotate
Rotates the video frame. The rotate
parameter specifies the degree of rotation.
Like before, this method can be called using the matmul
operator with the @
syntax. For example:
# regular call
video.rotate(180)
# calling with matmul
video @ 180
resize
Resizes the video in the clip. The scale_or_size
parameter can take different types:
- Integer type for scaling the video size. For example, 0.5 makes the video half its original size.
- List or tuple type for specific dimensions. For example,
[100, 100]
or(100, 100)
resizes the video to 100x100.
Like before, this method can be called using the mul
or truediv
operators with the *
and /
syntax. For example:
# regular call
video.resize(2)
# calling with mul
video * 2
# regular call
video.resize(1/2)
# or
video.resize(0.5)
# calling with truediv
video / 2
# both lists and tuples work similarly
# they yield the same output
video * (100, 100)
video / (100, 100)
mirror
Mirrors the video frame. The axis
parameter determines the mirror axis: 'x'
for horizontal and 'y'
for vertical.
As before, you can call this method using the or
operator with the |
syntax. For
# regular call
video.mirror('x')
# calling with or
video | 'x'
fade
Applies an intro or outro by fading to or from black. The parameters for this method are:
type
: The type of fade, either'in'
for an intro or'out'
for an outro.duration
: The duration of the fade.
cut
Cuts the video's duration. The parameters for this method are:
start
: The starting point of the cut, in seconds.end
: The ending point of the cut, in seconds.
add_volume
Increases the video's volume. The parameters for this method are:
add
: The amount to increase the volume.max_volume
: The maximum volume increase allowed. The default is 1 (recommended).set
: Allows volume adjustment even when the audio is muted. (It will not cause an exception, but no volume change will occur when called).
As before, you can call this method using the add
operator with the +
syntax. For example:
# regular call
video.add_volume(0.05)
# calling with add
video + 0.05
sub_volume
This method is similar to add_volume
, but it is used to decrease the video's volume. The changes are as follows:
- The
add
parameter is renamed tosub
. - The
max_volume
parameter is renamed tomin_volume
, and its default is 0 (recommended). - The operator call changes to
sub
with the-
syntax.
Sebagai contoh:
# regular call
video.sub_volume(0.05)
# calling with sub
video - 0.05
set_alpha
Sets the alpha or transparency for the frame surface. The value
parameter defines the alpha level, ranging from 0 (fully transparent) to 255 (fully opaque).
set_size
Adjusts the size of the video frame surface. Unlike the resize
method, this one only performs a scaling transformation on the surface. The size
parameter specifies the desired video size. Set it to None
if you want to reset the size.
set_speed
Sets the speed of the video clip. The speed
parameter adjusts the video playback speed.
As before, you can call this method using the pow
or floordiv
operators with the **
and //
syntax, respectively. For example:
# regular call
video.set_speed(2)
# calling with pow
video ** 2
# regular call
video.set_speed(1/2)
# or
video.set_speed(0.5)
# calling with floordiv
video // 2
set_fps
Sets the FPS (frames per second) of the video clip. The fps
parameter defines the desired FPS. This method may reduce the number of frames in videos with many frames, which can use up a lot of RAM, especially if caching is enabled. It is recommended to set the FPS between 24 and 30 FPS.
set_volume
Sets the volume of the video. The parameters are:
volume
: The value for volume adjustment, ranging from 0 to 1.set
: Allows volume adjustment even when the audio is muted. (It will not cause an exception, but no volume change will occur when called).
set_pos
Changes the position of the currently playing video in seconds. The pos
parameter sets the position in seconds for the video to resume. This will raise an exception if the value exceeds the video duration.
quit
Exits, cleans up, and frees the video while also deleting the temporary audio file __temp__.mp3
/ __temp_X__.mp3
. The show_log
parameter to determine whether to display error messages or not during the video closing process.
close
This method is identical to quit
.
__getitem__
This method is used to retrieve a frame by its index. Similar to the get_frame
method, it also returns a frame surface, but the index is a regular index instead of a time-based one. Additionally, this method supports slice indexing. It does not use caching to retrieve the video frame, so it may take some time. Below are some usage examples:
# To get the first frame
first_frame = video[0]
# To get the last frame
last_frame = video[-1]
# To get frames from the 10th to the 100th
scene_frames = video[10:100]
# To get frames from the 10th to the 100th, with every 5th frame
scene_frames = video[10:100:5]
__enter__
and __exit__
These methods are part of the Python context manager syntax, which simplifies resource management. With this, the Video
class will automatically close or exit when outside the with
block, or if an exception occurs inside it. This helps prevent file or memory leaks and releases the video file properly. Here are some usage examples:
import random
with pygvideo.Video('myvideo.mp4') as video:
random_index = random.randint(0, video.get_total_frame())
thumbnail = video[random_index]
__iter__
and __next__
These methods implement the iterator protocol, allowing the Video
class to loop using the for
keyword and yielding frame surfaces. Here is an example:
for frame in video:
screen.blit(frame, (0, 0))
Comparison Operators
Several comparison operators such as __eq__
, __ne__
, etc., are also available in the Video
class. The comparison is not based on object comparison or other criteria, but rather on the video duration. For example, if you want to compare the duration of an intro and outro video, you can use the following code:
intro = pygvideo.Video('intro.mp4')
outro = pygvideo.Video('intro.mp4')
if intro == outro:
print('Same duration!')
elif intro > outro:
print('Intro is bigger duration than outro')
In addition to comparing the Video
instances, you can also compare with other objects such as VideoFileClip
from MoviePy or with integers or floats representing milliseconds:
clip = VideoFileClip('someclip.mp4')
if intro == 5000:
print('Duration intro is 5s!')
if outro < clip:
print('Outro is small than someclip duration')
__bool__
, __list__
, __tuple__
, __len__
, __repr__
, __str__
, and __copy__
The remaining methods have the following functions:
__bool__
: ReturnsTrue
if the video is initialized.__list__
: Returns a list of all video frames. (Not nearly all of them).__tuple__
: Similar to__list__
, but returns a tuple instead.__len__
: Returns the total number of video frames.__repr__
: Returns the string repr of the object.__str__
: Returns brief information about the video.__copy__
: For copying using thecopy
method.
Function quit
Exits, cleans up, and releases the video globally. All the videos you have loaded will be released. This function is highly recommended once you no longer need the video or when you exit the Pygame window.
Function close
This function is the same as the quit
function.
Environment Variables
These are the environment variables from the os.environ
module.
PYGAME_VIDEO_HIDE_SUPPORT_PROMPT
Set this environment variable to hide the support prompt in the console. This must be set before importing PyGVideo.
PYGAME_VIDEO_TEMP
Set this environment variable to specify the directory path where audio or any temporary files are stored. For example, if you have a folder ./temp
, set this environment variable to ./temp
.
PYGAME_VIDEO_USED
This variable checks whether a video is in use or not. It will have the value '1'
when a video is being used and '0'
when none are in use. This changes when the methods prepare
and release
are called. For safety and to avoid exceptions, do not alter this value manually.
Additional Information
What's new in version 1.0.1?
Bug fixes and documentation
Kredit
- Me (AzzamMuhyala)
- ChatGPT -- LOL
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