Mercurial > mplayer.hg
view debian/control @ 9076:92014b66ed3d
ability to disable the nonsense expand filter is a must! otherwise
it's impossible to render subtitles earlier in the filter chain and
then scale them down with a scale filter; huge subs will get rendered
again on top!! (think dvd/vobsub where you can't just use smaller font
size) if anyone has a better way to handle this, do it! (e.g. make it
so that the first expand filter disabled osd for the rest of the
filter chain)
author | rfelker |
---|---|
date | Fri, 24 Jan 2003 01:04:50 +0000 |
parents | 8df33450a374 |
children | afcb63aa2eed |
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Source: mplayer Section: misc Priority: optional Maintainer: Dariush Pietrzak <eyck@ghost.anime.pl> Standards-Version: 3.2.1 Build-Depends: libglib-dev, libgtk-dev, xlibs-dev, libpng-dev, zlib1g-dev, debhelper (>= 2) Package: mplayer Architecture: any Depends: ${shlibs:Depends},debconf,libconfhelper-perl Description: The Ultimate Movie Player MPlayer is a movie player for LINUX (runs on many other Unices, and non-x86 CPUs, see the ports section). It plays most MPEG, VOB, AVI, OGG/OGM, VIVO, ASF/WMA/WMV, QT/MOV/MP4, FLI, RM, NuppelVideo, yuv4mpeg, FILM, RoQ, PVA files, supported by many native, XAnim, RealPlayer, and Win32 DLL codecs. You can watch VideoCD, SVCD, DVD, 3ivx, RealMedia, and DivX movies too (and you don't need the avifile library at all!). . Another big feature of MPlayer is the wide range of supported output drivers. It works with X11, Xv, DGA, OpenGL, SVGAlib, fbdev, AAlib, DirectFB, but you can also use GGI and SDL (and this way all their drivers) and some lowlevel card-specific drivers (for Matrox, 3Dfx and Radeon, Mach64, Permedia3) too! Most of them supports software or hardware scaling, so you can enjoy movies in fullscreen. . MPlayer supports displaying through some hardware MPEG decoder boards, such as the DVB and DXR3/Hollywood+. . And what about the nice big antialiased shaded subtitles (10 supported types) with European/ISO 8859-1,2 (Hungarian, English, Czech, etc), Cyrillic, Korean fonts, and the onscreen display (OSD)?