hah, a shellscript. I can tell it's a shell script, but I don't know enough to tell what that does, plus I'm on windoze and use foobar2000 as my main encoding frontend.
I wonder if this is intended as a temporal solution or a way of saying there will never be a q setting xD.
Anyway, does this mean you can craft a "q" of sorts through commandline? I ask because, even if I can't decode that perl code, I can tell it's just generating an arguments string for opusenc, so what's it doing anyway?
I wonder if this is intended as a temporal solution or a way of saying there will never be a q setting xD.
Anyway, does this mean you can craft a "q" of sorts through commandline? I ask because, even if I can't decode that perl code, I can tell it's just generating an arguments string for opusenc, so what's it doing anyway?