Copyright | (c) 2013-2021 Brendan Hay |
---|---|
License | Mozilla Public License, v. 2.0. |
Maintainer | Brendan Hay <brendan.g.hay+amazonka@gmail.com> |
Stability | auto-generated |
Portability | non-portable (GHC extensions) |
Safe Haskell | None |
Synopsis
Documentation
data InputClipping Source #
To transcode only portions of your input, include one input clip for each part of your input that you want in your output. All input clips that you specify will be included in every output of the job. For more information, see https://docs.aws.amazon.com/mediaconvert/latest/ug/assembling-multiple-inputs-and-input-clips.html.
See: newInputClipping
smart constructor.
InputClipping' | |
|
Instances
newInputClipping :: InputClipping Source #
Create a value of InputClipping
with all optional fields omitted.
Use generic-lens or optics to modify other optional fields.
The following record fields are available, with the corresponding lenses provided for backwards compatibility:
$sel:endTimecode:InputClipping'
, inputClipping_endTimecode
- Set End timecode (EndTimecode) to the end of the portion of the input
you are clipping. The frame corresponding to the End timecode value is
included in the clip. Start timecode or End timecode may be left blank,
but not both. Use the format HH:MM:SS:FF or HH:MM:SS;FF, where HH is the
hour, MM is the minute, SS is the second, and FF is the frame number.
When choosing this value, take into account your setting for timecode
source under input settings (InputTimecodeSource). For example, if you
have embedded timecodes that start at 01:00:00:00 and you want your clip
to end six minutes into the video, use 01:06:00:00.
$sel:startTimecode:InputClipping'
, inputClipping_startTimecode
- Set Start timecode (StartTimecode) to the beginning of the portion of
the input you are clipping. The frame corresponding to the Start
timecode value is included in the clip. Start timecode or End timecode
may be left blank, but not both. Use the format HH:MM:SS:FF or
HH:MM:SS;FF, where HH is the hour, MM is the minute, SS is the second,
and FF is the frame number. When choosing this value, take into account
your setting for Input timecode source. For example, if you have
embedded timecodes that start at 01:00:00:00 and you want your clip to
begin five minutes into the video, use 01:05:00:00.
inputClipping_endTimecode :: Lens' InputClipping (Maybe Text) Source #
Set End timecode (EndTimecode) to the end of the portion of the input you are clipping. The frame corresponding to the End timecode value is included in the clip. Start timecode or End timecode may be left blank, but not both. Use the format HH:MM:SS:FF or HH:MM:SS;FF, where HH is the hour, MM is the minute, SS is the second, and FF is the frame number. When choosing this value, take into account your setting for timecode source under input settings (InputTimecodeSource). For example, if you have embedded timecodes that start at 01:00:00:00 and you want your clip to end six minutes into the video, use 01:06:00:00.
inputClipping_startTimecode :: Lens' InputClipping (Maybe Text) Source #
Set Start timecode (StartTimecode) to the beginning of the portion of the input you are clipping. The frame corresponding to the Start timecode value is included in the clip. Start timecode or End timecode may be left blank, but not both. Use the format HH:MM:SS:FF or HH:MM:SS;FF, where HH is the hour, MM is the minute, SS is the second, and FF is the frame number. When choosing this value, take into account your setting for Input timecode source. For example, if you have embedded timecodes that start at 01:00:00:00 and you want your clip to begin five minutes into the video, use 01:05:00:00.