The Perl Toolchain Summit needs more sponsors. If your company depends on Perl, please support this very important event.

NAME

Time::Timecode - Video timecode class and command line program

SYNOPSIS

To install the timecode executable see "TIMECODE UTILITY PROGRAM".

To use with your Perl program:

 use Time::Timecode;

 my $tc1 = Time::Timecode->new(2, 0, 0, 12); # hh, mm, ss, ff
 print $tc1->fps;                            # $DEFAULT_FPS
 print $tc1;                                 # 02:00:00:12
 print $tc1->hours;                          # 2
 print $tc1->hh;                             # shorthanded version
 print $tc1->to_string('%Hh%Mm%Ss%ff')       # 2h0m0s12f

 my $tc2 = Time::Timecode->new('00:10:30:00', { fps => 25 } );
 print $tc2->total_frames;                   # 15750
 print $tc2->fps;                            # 25

 $tc2 = Time::Timecode->new(1800);           # Total frames
 print $tc1 + $tc2;                          # 02:01:00:12

 $tc1 = Time::Timecode->new('00:01:00;04');  # Dropframe (see the ";")
 print $tc1->is_dropframe;                   # 1

 my $diff = $tc1 - 1800;                     # Subtract 1800 frames
 print $tc1->is_dropframe;                   # 1, maintains LHS' options
 print $diff;                                # 00:00:02;00

 # Conversions
 my $pal  = $tc->convert(25);
 my $ntsc = $pal->convert(30), { dropframe => 1 });
 my $ndf  = $ntsc->to_non_dropframe;

 my $opts = { delimiter => ',', frame_delimiter => '+' };
 $Time::Timecode::DEFAULT_FPS = 23.976;
 $tc2 = Time::Timecode->new('00,10,30+00', $opts);
 print $tc2->fps                             # 23.976
 print $tc2->minutes;                        # 10
 print $tc2->seconds;                        # 30

DESCRIPTION

Time::Timecode supports SMTPE timecodes, any frame rate, drop/non-drop frame counts, basic arithmetic, and conversion between frame rates and drop/non-drop frame counts. The only requirements are that the timecode be between 00:00:00:00 and 99:99:99:99, inclusive, and frames per second (fps) are greater than zero. This means that you can create nonstandard timecodes (feature or bug?). Dropframe rules will still apply.

Time::Timecode instances can be created from a a variety of representations, see "CONSTRUCTOR".

Time::Timecode instances are immutable.

CONSTRUCTOR

new( TIMECODE [, OPTIONS ] )

Creates an immutable instance for TIMECODE with the given set of OPTIONS. If no OPTIONS are given the package defaults are used.

TIMECODE

TIMECODE can be one of the following:

  • A list denoting hours, minutes, seconds, and/or frames:

     $tc1 = Time::Timecode->new(1, 2, 3)
     $tc1 = Time::Timecode->new(1, 2, 3, 0)   #same as above
  • Frame count:

     $tc1 = Time::Timecode->new(1800)   # 00:01:00:00 @ 30 fps
  • Timecode string:

     $tc1 = Time::Timecode->new('00:02:00:25')

    Timecode strings with dropframe frame delimiters

    In the video encoding world timecodes with a frame delimiter of "." or ";" are considered dropframe. If either of these characters are used in the timecode string passed to new the resulting instance will dropframe.

    This can be overridden by setting the dropframe argument to false.

OPTIONS

OPTIONS must be a hash reference and can contain any of the following:

  • fps:

    Frames per second, must be greater than 0. Defaults to $Time::Timecode::DEFAULT_FPS

  • dropframe:

    A boolean value denoting wheather or not the timecode is dropframe. Defaults to $Time::Timecode::DEFAULT_DROPFRAME.

  • delimiter:

    The character used to delimit the timecode's hours, minutes, and seconds. Use the frame_delimiter option for delimiting the frames. Defaults to $Time::Timecode::DEFAULT_DELIMITER.

  • frame_delimiter:

    The character used to delimit the timecode's frames. Use the delimiter option for delimiting the rest of the timecode. Defaults to $Time::Timecode::DEFAULT_FRAME_DELIMITER.

METHODS

All time part accessors return an integer except frames which, depending on the frame rate, can return a float.

hours
hrs
hh

Returns the hour part of the timecode

minutes
mins
mm

Returns the mintue part of the timecode

seconds
secs
ss

Returns the second part of the timecode

frames
ff

Returns the frame part of the timecode

fps

Returns the frames per second

total_frames

Returns the timecode in frames

to_string([FORMAT])

Returns the timecode as string described by FORMAT. If FORMAT is not provided the string will be constructed according to the instance's defaults.

  $tc = Time::Timecode->new(2,0,10,24);
  $tc->to_string                        # 02:00:10:24
  "$tc"                                 # Same as above
  $tc->to_string('%02H%02M%S.%03f DF')  # 020010.024 DF

FORMAT is string of characters synonymous (mostly, in some way) with those used by strftime(3), with the exception that no leading zero will be added to single digit values. If you want leading zeros you must specify a field width like you would with printf(3).

The following formats are supported:

%H Hours

%M Minutes

%S Seconds

%f frames

%i in frames (i.e., $tc->total_frames)

%r Frame rate

%s Frames as a fraction of a second

%T Timecode in the instance's default format.

%% Literal percent character

When applicable, formats assume the width of the number they represent.

If a FORMAT is not provided the delimiter used to separate each portion of the timecode can vary. If the delimiter or frame_delimiter options were provided they will be used here. If the timecode was created from a timecode string that representation will be reconstructed.

This method is overloaded and will be called when an instance is quoted. I.e., "$tc" eq $tc->to_string

is_dropframe

Returns a boolean value denoting whether or not the timecode is dropframe.

to_non_dropframe

Converts the timecode to non-dropframe and returns a new Time::Timecode instance. The framerate is not changed.

If the current timecode is non-dropframe $self is returned.

to_dropframe

Converts the timecode to dropframe and returns a new Time::Timecode instance. The framerate is not changed.

If the current timecode is dropframe $self is returned.

convert( FPS [, OPTIONS ] )

Converts the timecode to FPS and returns a new instance.

OPTIONS are the same as those allowed by the CONSTRUCTOR. Any unspecified options will be taken from the calling instance.

The converted timecode will be non-dropframe.

ARITHMETIC & COMPARISON

Arithmatic and comparison are provided via operator overloading. When applicable results get their options from the left hand side (LHS) of the expression. If the LHS is a literal the options will be taken from the right hand side.

Supported Operations

Addition

  $tc1 = Time::Timecode->new(1800);
  $tc2 = Time::Timecode->new(1);
  print $tc1 + $tc2;
  print $tc1 + 1800;
  print 1800 + $tc1;
  print $tc1 + '00:10:00:00';

Subtraction

  $tc1 = Time::Timecode->new(3600);
  $tc2 = Time::Timecode->new(1);
  print $tc1 - $tc2;
  print $tc1 - 1800;
  print 1800 - $tc1;
  print $tc1 - '00:00:02:00';

Multiplication

  $tc1 = Time::Timecode->new(1800);
  print $tc1 * 2;
  print 2 * $tc1;

Division

  $tc1 = Time::Timecode->new(1800);
  print $tc1 / 2;

Pre/postincrement with/without assignment

  $tc1 = Time::Timecode->new(1800);
  $tc1 += 10;           # Add 10 frames
  print ++$tc1;         # Add 1 frame
  print $tc1--;         # Subtract it after printing

All comparison operators

  $tc1 = Time::Timecode->new(1800);
  $tc2 = Time::Timecode->new(1800);
  print 'equal!' if $tc1 == $tc2;
  print 'less than' if $tc1 < '02:00:12;22';
  print 'greater than' if $tc1 >= '02:00:12;22';
  # ....

DEFAULTS

All defaults except $DEFAULT_TO_STRING_FORMAT can be overridden when creating a new instance. $DEFAULT_TO_STRING_FORMAT can be overridden by passing a format to to_string.

$DEFAULT_FPS = 29.97

$DEFAULT_DROPFRAME = 0

$DEFAULT_DELIMITER = ':'

$DEFAULT_FRAME_DELIMITER = ':'

$DEFAULT_TO_STRING_FORMAT = 'HHxMMxSSxFF' where x represents the instance's frame and time separators.

TIMECODE UTILITY PROGRAM

Time::Timecode includes an executable called timecode that allows one to perform timecode conversions and arithmetic.

Using it requires Perl. Once Perl is installed run the following command to install it: cpan Time::Timecode

Usage

  usage: timecode [-h] [-c spec] [-f format] [-i spec] [expression]
      -h --help            option help
      -c --convert spec      convert expression according to `spec'
                             `spec' can be a number of FPS proceeded by an optional `D', `ND', `DF' or
                             a comma separated list of key=value.
                             key can be fps, dropframe, delimiter, frame_delimiter
      -f --format  format    output timecode according to `format' e.g., '%H:%M:%S at %r FPS'.
                             %H=hours, %M=mins, %S=secs, %f=frames, %i=total frames, %r=frame rate,
                             %s=frames in secs
      -i --input   spec      process incoming expressions according to `spec'; see -c for more info
      -q --quiet             ignore invalid expressions
      -v --version           print version information

  Expression can be a timecode, a number of frames, or an arithmetic expression composed one or both.
  If no expression is given timecode will read from stdin.

Examples

Convert frames to a 29.97 dropframe timecode

  timecode -c 29.97df 1800
  00:01:00:02

Convert 24 to 29.97 dropframe and output the result as frames

  timecode -i 24 -c 29.97df -f %i 00:12:33:19
  18091

Subtract two dropframe timecodes

  timecode -c 29.97 23:00:04.29-00:00:05.00
  22:58:37.05

Convert a list of timecodes from a file to a custom format, ignoring invalid timecodes

  cat > /tmp/times.txt
  02:01:00:12
  foo!
  02:02:21:00
  02:01:00:02

  timecode -qi 24 -f '%Hh %Mm %Ss and %f frames' < /tmp/times.txt
  02:01:00:12 2h 1m 0s and 12 frames
  02:02:21:00 2h 2m 21s and 0 frames
  02:01:00:02 2h 1m 0s and 2 frames

SEE ALSO

Time::Timecode source code
xslt-timecode - A pure, dependency free, XSLT 1.0 library for video timecode manipulation
iTunes Store Transporter: GUI - GUI and workflow automation for the iTunes Store’s Transporter (iTMSTransporter)

AUTHOR

Made by ScreenStaring.

CREDITS

Jinha Kim for schooling me on dropframe timecodes.

Andrew Duncan (and David Heidelberger) for the nice drop frame algorithm.

REFERENCES

For information about dropframe timecodes see: http://andrewduncan.net/timecodes/, http://dropframetimecode.org/, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMPTE_time_code#Drop_frame_timecode

COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2009-2018 Skye Shaw. All rights reserved.

LICENSE

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.