Wrapper around opencv's cv2.VideoCapture to simplify reading video files in python.
In a terminal window run:
conda install pyvideoreader -c ncbor
pip install pyvideoreaderOpen a video file and read frame 100:
from videoreader import VideoReader
vr = VideoReader(video_file_name)
print(vr) # prints video_file_name, number of frames, frame rate and frame size
frame = vr[100]
vr.close()Or use a context manger which takes care of opening and closing the video:
with VideoReader(video_file_name) as vr: # load the video
frame = vr[100]Supports slice-syntax: vr[start:end:step]. To iterate over all frames you need to use vr[:]. To read every 100th frame, starting at frame 500 and ending at frame 10000 do this:
for frame in vr[500:10000:100]:
do_something_with(frame)Lists, tuples or ranges can also be passed as indices, e.g. vr[(42, 314, 999)].
Note that indexing returns a generator - each frame in the indices is read on demand which saves memory. If you need all frames at once you can convert it to a list list(vr[start:end:frame]).
For compatibility, videoreader can also be used like the underlying cv2.VideoCapture:
ret, frame = vr.read() # read next frame