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Now premiere pro will prompt you to change sequence settings to match those of the video Now your sequence will have the perfect settings to match your video. Above is the warning you’ll get if your video settings don’t match the sequence settings – or when you drag and drop video into a new sequence. Jul 23, 2012 A sequence is just a container for various tracks on a single timeline. In a manner of speaking, a sequence is the framework for the movie that you're creating. When you export, you choose a codec (encoder) to export with, and that is what determines what. Adobe Premiere Pro: This project contained a sequence that could not be opened. No sequence preview preset file or codec could be associated with this sequence type. Adobe premiere sequence presets. Watch video Sequence presets and settings. In general, the settings of a sequence should match those of the primary footage type in the sequence. Though Premiere Pro can mix footage of various types in a sequence and compensate for differences in characteristics, performance and quality are maximized when such conversions are avoided.
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commented Nov 16, 2017
I have a server that responds with binary data and an octet-stream header: The response is a Buffer, so nock converts it to hex before storing in a file. I've truncated the response here and above, but it should be enough to get the idea. When reading back from the file, I expect it to be converted back into a Buffer via Buffer.from(response.body, 'hex'). Instead it gets converted into a normal Buffer, e.g. the first byte is 'f', the second byte is '0', instead of one byte I can work around this for the time being by setting |
added a commit that referenced this issue Feb 20, 2018
referenced this issue Feb 20, 2018
MergedRecord & replay binary file response correctly #1067
commented Feb 20, 2018
Hey @kevinburke can you check if #1067 fixes your problem? |
commented Feb 20, 2018
Apologies but I've since moved on from that engagement and probably won't have time to test :( best of luck! A way to test would probably be to start with the JSON I put up above, read it back into memory, and verify the length of the buffer in memory matches the Content-Length header. |
bot commented Sep 13, 2018
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I have downloaded some log files from my server which I want to search for a specific string for debugging purposes. All of them have the .log extension.
The problem is that one file has the plain text document (text/plain)
mime type while the other has the Binary (application/octet-stream)
mime type.
I can open the plain text document (text/plain)
mime type log file in a text editor as plain text but the other I can't since it's in binary.
How can I view the binary .log files with application/octet-stream
mime type?
2 Answers
From this answer in What makes grep consider a file to be binary?
If there is a NUL character anywhere in the file, grep will consider it as a binary file.
There might a workaround like this cat file | tr -d '000' | yourgrep
to eliminate all null first, and then to search through file.
I first tried it with one file in a test directory:
And the result, a plain text document (text/plain)
text mime file.
![Viewer Viewer](https://i.stack.imgur.com/ncDll.jpg)
Then since I am working with multiple files, I tried running the same command for multiple files in a directory:
And awesome, all my log files are now in a readable format!! :)
Based on your own answer, you seem to be referring specifically to searching files using grep
, rather than to changing a file's mime-type - see What is the XY problem?.
If grep
is simply misidentifying the files based on null bytes, then you can use the -a
or --binary-files=text
options to tell grep to treat them as text regardless, as described in the manual pages:
Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged mime-typefile-type or ask your own question.
I have an issue with data coming from the internet. I have a package coming from the internet that has the content-type:application/octet-stream.
My question is how do i decode it to readable values (such as 1,4.321,-2.6013 etc)? or is there any application that can do this?
For example:
3ecccccd is 0.400 (http://gregstoll.dyndns.org/~gregstoll/floattohex/) some are real numbers. Mitchell prodemand username and password. 07d0 is 2.000
2 Answers
HTTP's Content-Encoding
header only applies to how data is encoded inside of the HTTP message itself, not how the data itself is encoded outside of HTTP. There is no Content-Encoding
header present in your example, so HTTP is not encoding the data in any way, it is giving you the raw data as-is.
When HTTP's Content-Type
header is application/octet-stream
, that mean the data (after decoding it based on the Content-Encoding
, if any) is raw 8bit data, the sender does not know what the actual type of the data is. Without a more meaningful Content-Type
to tell you what the data actually represents, the only thing you can do is analyze the raw data and make educated guesses about what it might be, unless you know through other means what the data is supposed to be.
Usually, binary data formats have a header/signature at the front of the data to identify what the data is, so you might start with that.
Until you can identify the data type, you cannot know which bytes represent what kind of values, what endian is used for multi-byte values, etc. In short, you need more information about the data you are downloading in order to know how to process it.
Octet-stream Decoder Ubuntu
Hindi mp3 song 2017. That content type does not indicate any encoding. All it means is that the data represents a stream of (8-bit) bytes. How they're encoded is an entirely separate matter. To discover the encoding, you can look at other headers (such as Content-Encoding), or else the encoding might be implicit, in which case you'll need to consult documentation. Then choose an appropriate decoding strategy based on that.
Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged androidcwindowsdelphiweb or ask your own question.
How can I extract attachments from an email when they arrive encoded in the body of the email like this:
3 Answers
Save the email to a text file with the extension .uue
and extract the attachment with a de-archiver.
Copy only the base64 encoded text into a new text file foo.txt
.
I just decoded a base64 stream that had an extra bit on the end that I had to remove. It looked like this: --=_59494bda030d4629113a60ff13935d81--
. Before I removed it I got the error: Invalid character in input stream.
After I deleted it, no decoding errors and it opened just fine.
I was able to recover the file using a base64 decoder and copying only the actual text that was the encoded attachment, not any of the surrounding header/footer stuff.
protected by NifleFeb 6 '15 at 0:03
Application/octet-stream Decoder Ubuntu
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