On Sat, 10 Mar 2018, Moritz Barsnick wrote:

These suffixes were recently introduced in 
61c972384d311508d07f9360d196909e27195655
and completed in 8218249f1f04de65904f58519bde21948e5a0783.

Signed-off-by: Moritz Barsnick <barsn...@gmx.net>
---

I chose not to document the suffixes in the section describing the
HH:MM:SS.mmm syntax, even though they work there (with expected, but
quite difficult to explain effects).

doc/utils.texi | 5 +++--
1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/doc/utils.texi b/doc/utils.texi
index d55dd315c3..a094ee151c 100644
--- a/doc/utils.texi
+++ b/doc/utils.texi
@@ -110,11 +110,12 @@ maximum of 2 digits. The @var{m} at the end expresses 
decimal value for
@emph{or}

@example
-[-]@var{S}+[.@var{m}...]
+[-]@var{S}+[.@var{m}...][ms|us]
@end example

@var{S} expresses the number of seconds, with the optional decimal part
-@var{m}.
+@var{m}. The optional literal suffixes @samp{ms} or @samp{us} indicate to
+interpret the value as milliseconds or microseconds, respectively.

I think you missed the normal "s" suffix (as in seconds) which is also supported from now on.

Regards,
Marton
_______________________________________________
ffmpeg-devel mailing list
ffmpeg-devel@ffmpeg.org
http://ffmpeg.org/mailman/listinfo/ffmpeg-devel

Reply via email to