Let's dissect this, okay? The first paragraph that was changed:
I've found the solution.
This is a redundant sentence.
Apparently, the order of options in the command line matters
Great, important info, let's keep it.
(which I guess is a bug - EDIT: no it's not a bug, it's expected and necessary).
This is unnecessary if it was found to be expected. If you add something to a post and then later clarify that you were wrong, you might as well delete it.
The following works and is the solution to my question:
Unnecessary sentence.
Then, the code was changed to remove the deprecated -loop_input
option—it was already deprecated five years ago!
Instead, the following (which I had already tried) does not work (it generates a video of only one frame)
Why post something that does not work? It'd be better to remove that so as not to confuse people.
Now, there was a paragraph that I added, including some code, which made the answer more canonical. Note that this is a very important concept here on Stack Exchange—we want people who may have similar problems to also find useful information here. That's why I linked to the FFmpeg wiki (which always contains working examples for the most recent versions) and added a more general command, which most probably will fit better for the use cases of other visitors.
Finally, LordNeckbeard (who is also not just a random user, but a very prolific contributor to the FFmpeg mailing list and the ffmpeg tags here on Stack Overflow and other SE sites) edited the post to include a safeguard option that ensures compatibility with different players that only support 4:2:0 chroma subsampling.
In essence, not much changed in this post, except for the removal of a deprecated option that would cause the command to fail working with any recent ffmpeg version, and the addition of a more general example to help future visitors. The idea behind this edit was to improve the post without changing the author's intent—which is giving a solution to the problem in the question.
To be honest, I do not see anything to disagree with there. If I were the author and didn't know much about ffmpeg, I'd be happy for others with more experience to improve the post. The whole idea of Stack Exchange is to provide useful information in a way that can be improved by others, without requiring visitors to scroll through a huge thread just to find the one solution that works. We already have a near-perfect solution at the top of this Q&A thread, so why not fix the minor problems it developed over time?
Finally, the answer could be made community-wiki by the OP if they wanted to reduce their assumed "responsibility" for the post.
And lastly, I'd love for this comment thread to be cleaned up.