![]() NOTE: times given by the 2nd -ss option and the -to option are relative to the time given by the first -ss option. ![]() So this outputs a 3 min 10 sec long clip (5:10 - 2:00). ffmpeg seeks fast to the 1 min mark (the first -ss 00:01:00), then starts looking for key frames, and outputs a clip from 3 mins into the clip (given by the second -ss option) to 6 mins & 10 secs into the clip (specified by -to 00:05:10). ![]() I ended up using ffmpeg from the command-line to do the needful clipping.Īfter doing some research on this site and trying a few simpler commands I came up with the following command: ffmpeg -ss 00:01:00 -i input.mp4 -ss 00:02:00 -c copy -to 00:05:10 \Īs I understand it, with this command ffmpeg basically copies a portion of the clip from input.mp4 to output.mp4 (no re-encoding). ![]()
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