termplay

Name by the awesome @tbodt

Are you a terminal fanboy like me?
Sure, but do you ever watch YouTube? In your terminal?


termplay is the tool to convert images to ANSI sequences.
But it also supports playing videos... and YouTube...
Written in the systems language Rust, it has some solid performance.

When playing a video:
- Concurrency - It's converting to ANSI while ffmpeg is still processing! - Audio/Frame Sync - If one frame in takes longer to load and the audio continues on, - don't just pretend nothing happened! Skip a few frames! - Get back on track!

Example image
(Landscape image from pexels.com)

Compatibility

This tool is tested in GNOME Terminal, Konsole and alacritty (glitchy but amazing framerate).
Might not be fully or supported at all by whatever terminal you use.

Using

Image

```

termplay-image Convert a single image to text

USAGE: termplay image [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]

FLAGS: -k, --keep-size Keep the frame size. Overrides -w and -h --help Prints help information -V, --version Prints version information

OPTIONS: -w, --width The max width of the frame -h, --height The max height of the frame --converter How to convert the frame to ANSI. [default: truecolor] [values: truecolor, 256-color] --ratio Change frame pixel width/height ratio. [default: 0]

ARGS: The image to convert ```

Video

``` termplay-video Play a video in your terminal

USAGE: termplay video [FLAGS] [OPTIONS]

FLAGS: -k, --keep-size Keep the frame size. Overrides -w and -h --help Prints help information -V, --version Prints version information

OPTIONS: -w, --width The max width of the frame -h, --height The max height of the frame --converter How to convert the frame to ANSI. [default: truecolor] [values: truecolor, 256-color] -r, --rate The framerate of the video [default: 10] --ratio Change frame pixel width/height ratio. [default: 0]

ARGS:

YouTube

Replace video with ytdl, and supply a URL as VIDEO, and boom!
Watch from YouTube directly!

Also has --format (short -f) to supply formats to youtube-dl to change quality and stuff.

Pre-processing

If you feel like playing a video multiple times on the same settings,
you can pre-process a video.

That means doing all the processing part separately, so you can skip it if you do it multiple times.
Example: ``` $ termplay preprocess video.mp4 Checking ffmpeg... SUCCESS

Creating directory... Starting conversion: Video -> Image... Started new process. Converting: Image -> Text Processing frame622.png Seems like we have reached the end Converting: Video -> Music Number of frames: 621 $ termplay video termplay-video 621 # 'termplay-video' is the default name for the processed folder. ```

Fun fact:
If you change the rate, you have to do it on both while pre-processing and while playing.
Or... don't. And enjoy playing the video in fast or slow motion.

Installing

... That said, it comes with a slight flaw. For now, you have to compile this yourself. No big deal.
You do need to install anything ears requires, though.
Other than that, this project is hosted on crates.io.
So to install you just need cargo install termplay

On Ubuntu, a full installation from nothing (not even Rust installed) would look like ```bash curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh sudo apt install libopenal-dev libsndfile1-dev ffmpeg # FFmpeg if using video/ytdl feature sudo -H pip install --upgrade youtube-dl # If using ytdl feature. Sudo is required if you're not using a single user python installation

cargo install termplay `` Poof!targets/release/termplay` is created