Whichever way I look at this, it comes down to things that have been hammered out long before my time, in the very design of stackoverflow: As long as users are allowed to ask questions, there will always be bad ones.
What it comes down to for me:
ffmpeg
, really is an expert topic. Whether or not it requires specific programming code as part of the question, invoking ffmpeg
is often programming itself.
The quality of answer here is top notch. I know that this in itself is not a good reason to allow off-topic questions, but when i consider where I myself have learned the vast majority of my ffmpeg
knowledge, it is from here (and the ffmpeg docs are pretty good, and there's a lot of good wrappers on github).
The scope is enormous, and anything much beyond a default -i input output.mp4
usage (which in itself has a number of implicit options), requires some actual knowledge. There's also the global syntax vs codec specific syntax which can be very confusing, often undocumented, and requires expert help to operate correctly. - At times I have ended up on github looking at source just to figure out option mappings and deciphering badly worded or missing arguments/options (h264_nvenc, decklink, i'm looking at you).
Is it really any different to say grep
/sed
questions ? (not answers that involve the use of grep
/sed
). Most of these that I've seen are either to do with regex or the program itself. Perhaps the answer is no, in which case I think that list could expand quite a lot.
Often ffmpeg is wrapped in scripts, such as the black bar example above, or, requires some kind of command line at least to solve certain problems or set certain environment variables.
The fact that there are frameworks that allow anyone to compile in third party libraries, without explicit support in the main branch, opens up another world of possible mixtures of technologies, which may mean that the most suitable people with the right skillsets to help with these scenarios, are on stackoverflow.
All of those above points really form one big point, which I suppose should be weighed up against how much of a problem it's causing. I'm too new here to know if ffmpeg
questions are like weeds. What I do know is that people are pretty tough here. There's a lot of questions I haven't had the nerve to ask, so my point here is that if these ffmpeg
questions have survived, is there perhaps reasons why they were asked here in the first place ?