[MPlayer-DOCS] CVS: main/DOCS/xml/en mencoder.xml,1.64,1.65

The Wanderer inverseparadox at comcast.net
Sun May 15 04:30:26 CEST 2005


Guillaume Poirier CVS wrote:

> Log Message:
> some more fixes suggested by The Wanderer and Rich

Still two things (one old, one new):

> Index: mencoder.xml
> ===================================================================
> RCS file: /cvsroot/mplayer/main/DOCS/xml/en/mencoder.xml,v
> retrieving revision 1.64
> retrieving revision 1.65
> diff -u -r1.64 -r1.65
> --- mencoder.xml	14 May 2005 15:44:52 -0000	1.64
> +++ mencoder.xml	14 May 2005 19:37:54 -0000	1.65
> @@ -666,7 +666,7 @@
>    grouped as a frame, even though they are not intended to be shown
>    at the same moment in time.
>    The MPEG-2 standard used on DVD and digital TV provides both a
> -  way to encode the original progressive frames, and to store in
> +  way to encode the original progressive frames, and store in

...you still have the unwanted comma here; is there some specific reason
you're retaining it which I don't know about?

You also still have "both a way to encode ... and store", instead of
either "a way to both encode ... and store" or "a way both to encode ...
and to store", here. Am I being unclear about what it is I'm trying to
convey, or is there something else involved which I'm not seeing?

>    Most codecs which support ABR encode only support two pass encode
>    while some others such as <systemitem class="library">x264</systemitem>
>    and <systemitem class="library">libavcodec</systemitem> support
> -  multi-pass, which slightly improves quality at each pass,
> -  yet this improvement is no longer noticeable after the 6th or so pass.
> -  Therefore, in this section, two pass and multi-pass will be used
> +  multipass, which slightly improves quality at each pass,
> +  yet this improvement is no longer mesurable nor noticeable after the
> +  4th or so pass.

Typo: "measurable".

-- 
       The Wanderer

Warning: Simply because I argue an issue does not mean I agree with any
side of it.

A government exists to serve its citizens, not to control them.




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