Mercurial > mplayer.hg
changeset 13313:2c19d3d8a5fb
minor changes I came across during sync of videofilters section
(hope it's common-sense)
author | kraymer |
---|---|
date | Sat, 11 Sep 2004 19:18:19 +0000 |
parents | f5c47d023557 |
children | 357f3ab3b2ee |
files | DOCS/man/en/mplayer.1 |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 11 insertions(+), 11 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/DOCS/man/en/mplayer.1 Sat Sep 11 19:15:48 2004 +0000 +++ b/DOCS/man/en/mplayer.1 Sat Sep 11 19:18:19 2004 +0000 @@ -3372,7 +3372,7 @@ everything (255) (default: 24). .br .IPs round -Value which the width/height should be divisible by (default: 16). +Value which the width/\:height should be divisible by (default: 16). The offset is automatically adjusted to center the video. Use 2 to get only even dimensions (needed for 4:2:2 video). 16 is best when encoding to most video codecs. @@ -3387,7 +3387,7 @@ .RSs .IPs w,h width and height (default: -1, maximum possible width where boundaries -are still visible. +are still visible.) .IPs x,y top left corner position (default: -1, uppermost leftmost) .RE @@ -3400,14 +3400,14 @@ Can be used for placing subtitles/\:OSD in the resulting black bands. .RSs .IPs w,h -expanded width,height (default: original width,height). +Expanded width,height (default: original width,height). Negative values for w and h are treated as offsets to the original size. .sp 1 .I EXAMPLE: .PD 0 .RSs .IP expand=0:-50:0:0 -adds a 50 pixel border to the bottom of the picture +Adds a 50 pixel border to the bottom of the picture. .RE .PD 1 .IPs x,y @@ -3461,13 +3461,13 @@ .IPs chr_drop chroma skipping .RSss -0: use all available input lines for chroma -.br -1: use only every 2. input line for chroma -.br -2: use only every 4. input line for chroma -.br -3: use only every 8. input line for chroma +0: Use all available input lines for chroma. +.br +1: Use only every 2. input line for chroma. +.br +2: Use only every 4. input line for chroma. +.br +3: Use only every 8. input line for chroma. .REss .IPs param scaling parameter (depends upon the scaling method used)