I promoted this question I am running ORB in cv2 and the program just keeps on crashing out of Staging Ground
You should not have done this. The question is nowhere near meeting site standards. Please read:
Question Close Reasons - Definitions and Guidance
Why should I help close "bad" questions that I think are valid, instead of helping the OP with an answer?
because the question was clear and well-stated
No, it isn't. What does OP mean that the code "crashes"? According to your own comment, the code runs to the end successfully. It's not apparent that there's any problem to ask a question about in the first place. If you believe that the problem is that the video plays too quickly, and that the question is "how do I force the video to play at real-time speed rather than as quickly as possible" then you are reading something that isn't in the question. You should have gotten that ironed out in the Staging Ground first: confirmed that you correctly understood, then edited the question yourself, then looked for a duplicate before graduating the question.
But the OP doesn't even agree with you: "So the error brought out that the frame is empty". It's hard to make any sense of that at all, but it sounds like OP saw some kind of error message - but didn't see fit to show it properly and completely, i.e., in a way that meets standards.
As a SG reviewer, it's your responsibility to understand and enforce those standards.
and they included a git repository link that included a minimal but functional reproducing case
This is not acceptable, as a well known and settled matter of policy:
Something in my web site or project doesn't work. Can I just paste a link to it?
I would strongly encourage you to take a moment to read through the rest of the FAQ entries on Meta before reviewing more SG questions (and especially before answering any main-site questions).
When the question is about the behaviour of code, code necessary to reproduce the problem must be in the question itself. When the question is about the operation of that code on some data, the question must also include either a complete example set of data, or hard-coded values in the program, or code which generates the necessary data.
If such things wouldn't fit in a post here, the question is inherently not suitable. Before posting a question a problem in code, it's OP's responsibility to figure out what's actually necessary to cause the problem - and a well scoped question will necessarily not require very much to cause the problem.
If the problem can be reproduced with any video file, or "any video file meeting XYZ constraints", then the question should say that instead of trying to include the data. If it requires a specific video, then OP is responsible for diagnosing what content in the video is necessary to cause the problem. (In all likelihood, a problem that really looks like that will boil down to a bug report for some library, not a proper SO question.)
Moments after I promoted it, it had already gathered a downvote and a complaint that the code was not present in the post. I find this disingenuous.
Our standards are our standards. The code must be present in the post. Please make sure you understand the reasoning. Nothing about this question makes it worthy of an exception.
In particular, please note well that we do not operate a help desk; the purpose of questions here is not to get the underlying problem solved for the OP, but instead to help build a library.
In order to run the test, you're going to have to fetch the github repo anyway
That counts against the question. A suitable question for Stack Overflow necessarily does not involve fetching a github repo for any reason.
opencv
tag.