@Wes if you just want smoothing, averaging will do it, but from your diagram it seems you want to switch between smoothing and not smoothing the data......for that you can't do a simple algorithm, you need to store a 'window' into the bit of data you consider noisy.
@Wes "doing it frame by frame takes a lot of time". Wait, in which way does it take too much time? Per video, or just for how many videos you have to do?
I do not belive it is reasonable for someone to give you a single video of a tour of a house and expect you to break it up into individual part of the house without telling you which part of the house they are in at which point in the video
if it's only based on light levels then fine, that should be doable with 5 years and a team of 20, but if you want me to automatically the part where you point your phone at your shoes and talk about the match last night, fuck off
OK so I think you need to divide the thing up into "scenes", so say computer your 10-point luminosity value as sugested ealier, and also as you said earlier do a multi-pass aproach to figure out where the break points are, then apply SMA (or similar?) to those chunks
so go through and take e.g. the avg luminosity for every second, then if luminosity has been e.g. 50% higher for all 5 secs than the 6th secs, consider 5 secs ago to be a scene change
basically index the luminosity at, say 0.25 sec intervals to produce a smaller data set that is much cheaper to work with
OK so I think you need to divide the thing up into "scenes", so say computer your 10-point luminosity value as sugested ealier, and also as you said earlier do a multi-pass aproach to figure out where the break points are, then apply SMA (or similar?) to those chunks
this is what I meant, tho feel like didn't come across
like even in the same room if the cameraman rotates 180° you can get totally different luminance, because a window (with sunlight outside) goes in or out of view
one last thought @Wes, TV companies are shit at what you are trying to do, so many times you get adverts mid scene, it's a really hard problem you are trying to solve, results will always be horrible and you should do all you can to persuade people to try harder to make better videos because computers are not fucking magic :-P
I have CI4 app, if I execute code via CLI like this codeigniter4.github.io/userguide/cli/cli.html its not working, however if I navigate to web e.g. example.com/index.php/tools/message/to its working. What should I check?
Hello folks. Recently I've noticed many people who genuinely think that generators are used to reduce the memory overhead. I think it's because of the phrasing in the corresponding man page, https://www.php.net/manual/en/language.generators.overview.php Would it be a good idea to add an note that explicitly states that generators are essentially a syntax sugar and the mechanism that actually reduces the memory overhead is the code wrapped inside? Which always could be used without generators at all, just like the for loop in the provided example?
@Wes if you just want smoothing, averaging will do it, but from your diagram it seems you want to switch between smoothing and not smoothing the data......for that you can't do a simple algorithm, you need to store a 'window' into the bit of data you consider noisy.
And you probably still aren't sure. But it sounds like some of the time you want no effect, other times, you want some munging of the data, based on values around a 'noisy' point.
btw, the other bit you haven't mentioned yet is what happens when there are two 'noisy' points near each other.....I'm guessing you either want to extend the window to be bigger, or to exclude noisy points from the averaging.
I'm thinking of cases where you want the operator to be dynamic based on user input.
@JRL when you're programming a calculator, and you want to have an 'undo' button.
Or any thing where the operations are being done by a user, rather than raw code.
which is part of why in my opinion - "Operand implementations cannot be called on an instance of an object the way normal methods can." is a bit rubbish.....that makes it harder to write unit tests for that code.
@Danack You should still be able to write unit tests, you would just have to use the operators.
These are not for handling the entire application concept of adding, or subtracting, or so on. You could still have a function named add() on your object that is called from operator +(), and i could see many cases where that happens.
These are specifically to control the way your objects interact with code, not with users.
if your object does depend on user input during operation +(), that should be part of the object state
apparently, the first argument is coming through with an unknown type in the zval
printzv just says Unknown type 40
i don't see how that's possible considering it is just copied using ZVAL_COPY_VALUE
and the op that's copied has the right type, and the params array its copied into also has the right type and value prior to passing it off to the function call
I believe it was because __toString() would get confused with ->value on backed enums, and we weren't sure yet if that was a good idea. We wanted to reserve Stringable in case we figured out a generic use for it later.
@Crell i have refused to separate the inequality operators into pieces, or to separate the == and != operators, or to provide == or <=> with an operator position argument to try and limit evil
A static anon function means "don't capture an object scope if we're inside an object scope when this is called." If you're not using $this, it's a good idea.
Although in this case I'm not in an object scope so it doesn't matter; it's more out of habit.