- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
- google@lemdro.id
- cross-posted to:
- technology@beehaw.org
- google@lemdro.id
cross-posted from: https://lemdro.id/post/2787773 (!google@lemdro.id)
cross-posted from: https://lemdro.id/post/2787773 (!google@lemdro.id)
Fully, you say?
$ yt-dlp -f 22 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WFEEZBmUYTM [youtube] Extracting URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WFEEZBmUYTM [youtube] WFEEZBmUYTM: Downloading webpage [youtube] WFEEZBmUYTM: Downloading ios player API JSON [youtube] WFEEZBmUYTM: Downloading android player API JSON [youtube] WFEEZBmUYTM: Downloading m3u8 information [info] WFEEZBmUYTM: Downloading 1 format(s): 22 [download] Destination: Noiselund - Are You There? [WFEEZBmUYTM].mp4 [download] 100% of 12.82MiB in 00:00:04 at 2.99MiB/s
Oh, guess not.
Yeah yt-dlp has been my strat this whole time anyway. Also Piped and Invidious get the job done when i’m too lazy to type in one short command for every video I watch.
Also, specifying format with yt-dlp is unnecessary (“-f 22”) if you have ffmpeg installed iirc because it automatically selects the highest quality, thus shortening the command even further.
I use -f 22 to set a lower quality actually, because most videos on youtube are needlessly larger than my 5K monitor.
Higher resolution videos actually have better bitrates on youtube. Like if you select 4k even if your monitor is just 1080p, the video will look much better.
The video stutters for me if I do that
You can also put “alias y=yt-dlp” in your ~/.bashrc to minimize it to “y”. Or set up a keyboard shortcut to a script that executes the command with your clipboard content.
Or do the same with “mpv” instead of “yt-dlp” to watch the video stream directly without downloading.