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I've been recently playing around with FFmpeg and I was trying to convert .avi
to .gif
since other methods I've tried to so far didn't work so well.
What I noticed is that, when I use this command:
ffmpeg -I filename.gif
I can see some of the file information, including the FPS.
And I saw that the highest FPS that is possible so that the video you convert into a gif does not become slower, is 50 FPS.
Now is that correct though? Is the highest FPS amount you can have in a GIF, so that it doesn't become slower 50 FPS?
So do 60 FPS GIF's not exist?
5One could emulate a 60 fps GIF by setting delay to 2,2,1 for every 3 frames. – Gyan – 2019-06-16T15:03:46.057
So where exactly would you change the Delay Time, and in what unit is the delay time? – karl-police – 2019-06-16T15:10:18.187
The unit is 1/100. As described in the GIF specification, there's a global delay time, and you can also set the delay time for each frame. The location is in the GCE part of the GIF.
ffmpeg
probably doesn't allow that level of control. – dirkt – 2019-06-16T16:45:26.613