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03:48
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A: How can I reduce the file size of a video created with UIImagePickerController?

Lance SamariaCode for Swift 5 and Good Quality Here's how to do it following code from this link. The problem with the link is it only works with .mov file output, if you want to output a .mp4 file it will crash. The code below lets you get a .mp4 output. It is tried, tested, and works. Example a 15 sec video...

np, we all need to help each other. Cheers!
@DavidKyslenko thanks for pointing out the camel casing issue, I made the update. Cheers!!!
@YogeshPatel I never dealt with only audio before but I would think you would use the same exact code from above but exclude anything that has to do with video such as videoFinished, videoTrack, videoReaderSettings, assetReaderVideoOutput, videoSettings, videoInput, and videoInputQueue. If you remove those variables from the file then it should still work. Message me if it doesn't.
@YogeshPatel You didn't try any of the code from my answer. You have to try the code and exclude the parts that I mentioned above and see what happens. Everything is explained on what to do in the answer from the code itself to how to use it. The question you added is closed
@YogeshPatel you must be doing something wrong. I just did exactly what I told you to do earlier, exclude anything that says video. I just tried an audio file from here ee.columbia.edu/~dpwe/sounds/music, the africa-toto.wav file. It was 12.0 mb before compression and then 3.0 mb after compression. I used the same exact code from the answer and just excluded everything that I told you to exclude.
@Bagusflyer I don’t understand what you’re asking me. If you’re saying you’re using a similar method then that means it’s a different method then the one that I posted. How can I comment on something else?
@Bagusflyer try to lower the bit as low as possible. There has to be a tradeoff. Get a fast compression with crappy quality or great quality with a slow compression. I notice the audio slows things up quite a bit, you can also try it on a background task but if you have anything inside the actual function itself like an alert make sure to update it and anything else on the mainQueue. Btw if the answer works please upvote it. If it doesn't work and you can find an answer that gives you fast compression and great results please post it. I would use that myself.
@Bagusflyer like this: DispatchQueue.global(qos: .background).async { [weak self] in self?.compressFile(videoURL) { [weak self] (compressedURL) in } }, but again inside the actual compressFile itself you have to update anything such as an alert on the mainQueue or the app will crash
Hey man, your code works great. Struggled a ton before finding your post here. I am running into a strange issue which I possible just am doing something wrong but I seems like theres a minimum bitrate it will compress to, ignoring what value I give it. For example, setting the bitrate to 25 and 250000 for me yields the same result. Same quality video, both reduced to 12mb from 108mb. Do you have a possible explanation for this? How can I properly compress it down to size. I am working on a discord compressor so I can compress media down to 8mb.
@DennyL. Glad the code helped! If it worked you should upvote. As per your bitrate issue this should answer your question. stackoverflow.com/a/44023016/4833705. FYI even though that link should answer your question, you can do research on AVVideoAverageBitRateKey, that's what uses the bitrate
Upvoted! That link doesn't quite explain my issue because I use tools like ffmpeg to convert any size media down to 8mb for example without a beat. Here however I seemingly am hitting some sort of minimum threshold? In other words, compressing my video using your code with 250,000 bitrate or 500 bitrate will both yield me a 12mb, same quality video from 108mb when the 500 bitrate should be way smaller and the quality should be much degraded
After doing some more testing, seems like changing the bitrate variable in AVVideoCompressionPropertiesKey: [AVVideoAverageBitRateKey: bitrate] does not affect my output whatsoever... any ideas?
I use tools like ffmpeg to convert any size media down to 8mb, maybe that's the issue. For example I don't use ffmpeg at all. I pass in the raw videoUrl. Try using your videoUrl without any ffmpeg. The only time I've seen a difference in the reduction size (eg. 12mb) is when the the videoUrl's recording time changes. A 15 sec video will get reduced to 2 mb but a 30 sec video gets reduced to 4 mb.
03:48
Sorry I think you misunderstood me. ffmpeg is a cli tool that you can use to achieve what I am trying to do. But I am trying to replicate that functionality using swift so I can make a simpler GUI application for myself and others to use. I do pass just the raw videoURL into the compress function. That aside, why does the file size not change when I change the bitrate?
@DennyL. Thanks for the clarification. In the link I sent you, the question was I'm setting AVVideoAverageBitRateKey to 900000, but the videos I record get different bitrate values. Always different values. The ending part of the answer was Notice the key you're using to specify bitrate is called AVVideoAverageBitRateKey - average value, not fixed value. Requesting a bitrate is like requesting a ballpark figure, the outcome should be close to what you requested, but probably not exactly the same. Seems to vary: bitrate is called AVVideoAverageBitRateKey - average value, not fixed value
Okay, I see. I guess the reason I ask is because in the cli tool ffmpeg you simply keep reducing and reducing the bitrate to lower quality and subsequently file size. That being said, how would I go about limiting a video to say 8mb? cropping it isn’t an option as that defeats the whole purpose of this type of compressor. Check out this website for a better understanding of what I’m aiming for. Except I want to make it serverless/local aka fully client side
@DennyL Reduce the recording time. That would reduce the file size.

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