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  • Language
    Rust
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created over 1 year ago
  • Updated over 1 year ago

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Repository Details

A terminal ASCII media player. View images, gifs, videos, webcam, YouTube, etc.. directly in the terminal as ASCII art.

Image description

Terminal Media Player

Crates.io Crates.io License Aur

View images, videos (files or YouTube links), webcam, etc directly in the terminal as ASCII. All images you see below are just made by characters on the terminal command line, drawn really fast.

Table of Contents

Who is it for?

  • You really don't like graphical applications or work on a computer without graphical capabilities.
  • You are looking for a quick way to convert visual media to ASCII art.
  • You want to watch a video in the terminal, but you don't want to use mpv or vlc because they're too mainstream.
  • You want to show off your terminal skills to your friends and make them think you're a hacker.

Features

This crate is still in early development, but it already has a lot of features. Here's a list of what it can or can't do:

  • Converts and shows any media to ASCII art in the terminal
  • Supports images/gifs/videos/webcam and YouTube links
  • Any resolution, aspect ratio, and framerate
  • Use any character set as supported by your terminal
  • Handy pause/unpause and char map selection controls
  • RGB Colors (on terminals that support RGB colors)
  • Play sounds
  • Spark joy
  • Full media controls (forward, backwards, loop, etc)
  • Subtitles
  • Replace a fully-fledged media player

RGB Colors

colors

Live update when updating character size

font_size

On-the-fly character map selection

char_maps

Dynamic resize

resize

Emojis

emojis

Webcam support

webcam

Getting Started

These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development and testing purposes.

Prerequisites

Being a Rust crate, you will need to have Rust installed on your system. You can find the installation instructions here.

The following dependencies are also required:

  • OpenCV 4 Tested with OpenCV 4. It may work with OpenCV 3.4 and above.
  • LLVM
  • ffmpeg Currently supported FFmpeg versions: 3.4.x through 4.4.x.
  • Optional dependency for YouTube playback support: yt-dlp
  • Optional dependency for audio playback via MPV: MPV

They can be simply installed on Linux with your package manager. See below for more details.

Prerequisites Installation on Linux

If you're on Linux (Ubuntu), you can install all dependencies with your package manager. First install Rust:

sudo apt install curl
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.rustup.rs | sh

Then install tplay's prerequisite dependencies:

sudo apt install libopencv-dev clang libclang-dev ffmpeg libavfilter-dev libavdevice-dev libasound2-dev yt-dlp

Prerequisites installation on Windows

The crate can run on Windows and all prerequisites (opencv, ffmpeg) can be installed with vcpkg. However, the installation/setup process is lengthy and prone to errors. Performance is also very poor. Save yourself a headache: use WSL and follow the Linux instructions.

Installation

For users

Arch Linux

You can install it on Arch Linux using aur by running the following commands (using paru):

paru -S tplay-git

Other Distros

The package is not currently available on other Linux distros. With contribution and support it can be made available on other distros as well :).

Install Using Cargo

You can install the tplay command line tool by running the following command:

# Install the tplay command line tool
cargo install tplay

So that you can run it from anywhere as

tplay <media> [options]

For developers

# Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/maxcurzi/tplay.git

# Change to the project directory
cd tplay

# (optional) Build the project
cargo build

# (optional) Run the tests
cargo test

# Run the project (use --release for faster performance)
cargo run --release -- <media> [options]

Feature flags

By default, the crate uses rodio for audio playback. If you wish to use MPV (libmpv1 libmpv1-dev) as an audio playback backend, you can build/install the crate with:

--features="mpv_0_35" --no-default-features

or

--features="mpv_0_34" --no-default-features

within cargo build, cargo run, or cargo install commands.

MPV support may be dropped in future releases.

Usage

tplay <media> [options]

Argument Description
media Name of the file or stream to be processed (required).
-f, --fps Forces a specific frame rate (--fps 23.976).
-c, --char-map Custom lookup character table to use for the output (default: .:-=+*#%@).
-g, --gray Start in grayscale mode
-w, --w-mod Experimental width modifier for certain characters such as emojis (default: 1). Use a value of 2 if your char_map is composed of emojis.
-a, --allow-frame-skip Experimental frame skip flag. Try to use it if the playback is too slow.
-n, --new-lines Experimental flag. Adds newline and carriage return \n\r at the end of each line (except the last). Terminals wrap around and don't need new lines, but if you want to copy-paste the text outside the terminal you may want them. The output would be a single long string otherwise. Uses more CPU.

Substitute tplay with cargo run --release -- if you plan to run from source.

# Run it
tplay <media> [options]

# Example: local image
tplay ./image.png

# Example: local gif
tplay ./image.gif

# Example: local video
tplay ./video.mp4

# Example: remote video (YouTube)
tplay https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQw4w9WgXcQ

# Example: remote video (Other)
tplay https://media.developer.dolby.com/Atmos/MP4/shattered-3Mb.mp4

# Example: YouTube video, with different char maps
tplay https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fShlVhCfHig --char-map " ░▒▓█"

# Example: YouTube video, with different char maps (use w-mod to adjust width when using emoji-based char maps)
tplay https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FtutLA63Cp8 --char-map "🍎🍏❤️😊" --w-mod 2

# Example: webcam on Linux (YMMV on other OSes)
tplay /dev/video0

Playback commands

  • 0-9 - change character map (with0 0
  • space - toggle pause/unpause
  • g - toggle grayscale/color
  • m - toggle mute/unmute
  • q - quit

Known Issues

  • Videos played through the Konsole terminal may have reduced performance. This is due to the way Konsole handles terminal output. If you experience this issue, try using a different terminal emulator. I recommend Alacritty for great performance.
  • Media playback is CPU-intensive. To improve performance, increase the font size, reduce the terminal window size, or run with the -a / --allow-frame-skip flag.

Alternatives

This is my ASCII media player: there are many like it, but this one is mine.

For other ASCII media players, check out: https://github.com/search?q=ascii+player&type=repositories

Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Please open an issue or submit a pull request. Some ideas:

  • Reduce external dependencies and streamline the installation process.
  • Investigate migration from OpenCV to FFmpeg.
  • More media controls (jump forward, jump backwards, loop, etc.).
  • Testing and feedback on installing and running it on other OSes.
  • Let me know if you have any other ideas!

License

This project is licensed under the MIT License - see the LICENSE file for details.

Why?

Your Scientists Were So Preoccupied With Whether Or Not They Could, They Didn’t Stop To Think If They Should

Mostly did it for fun while learning Rust. I also wanted to see if it was possible to make a video player that could run in the terminal. I think it's pretty cool that you can play videos in the terminal now. I hope you enjoy it too!

Credits

Thanks to the following people for their contributions and support: