| Originall From: Posted 2015-05-29 http://ubwg.net/b/full-list-of-ffmpeg-flags-and-options | |
| This is the complete list that’s outputted by ffmpeg when running ffmpeg -h full. | |
| usage: ffmpeg [options] [[infile options] -i infile]… {[outfile options] outfile}… | |
| Getting help: | |
| -h — print basic options | |
| -h long — print more options | |
| -h full — print all options (including all format and codec specific options, very long) |
This is a story about how I tried to use Go for scripting. In this story, I’ll discuss the need for a Go script, how we would expect it to behave and the possible implementations; During the discussion I’ll deep dive to scripts, shells, and shebangs. Finally, we’ll discuss solutions that will make Go scripts work.
While python and bash are popular scripting languages, C, C++ and Java are not used for scripts at all, and some languages are somewhere in between.
Note: I have moved this list to a proper repository. I'll leave this gist up, but it won't be updated. To submit an idea, open a PR on the repo.
Note that I have not tried all of these personally, and cannot and do not vouch for all of the tools listed here. In most cases, the descriptions here are copied directly from their code repos. Some may have been abandoned. Investigate before installing/using.
The ones I use regularly include: bat, dust, fd, fend, hyperfine, miniserve, ripgrep, just, cargo-audit and cargo-wipe.

