
You could do it with OpenGl, although it wouldn't be straightforward. You can also do it in visvis (which uses OpenGl). Here's some untested code that would do this: import visvis as vv vv.clf() # Clear figure (or create a new figure) tex = vv.imshow(first_frame) while video_not_ended: tex.SetData(next_frame) time.sleep(1.0/framerate) vv.processEvents() - Almar On 30 January 2013 22:07, Colin Lea <colincsl@gmail.com> wrote:
For a long time now I've kept OpenCV in my vision stack primarily for displaying videos. I'm trying to get rid of it as a dependence for use on a secure remote server which I don't have unfettered access to.
So I'm wondering, how do other people display videos? I see that PyGame is another option. Does anyone use that? By displaying videos essentially I just mean showing streams of images (not necessary from a video file).
If nobody else has a solution other than to use OpenCV, would it be of interest to implement something (either using PyGame or otherwise) for skimage?
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Almar Klein