smpte-timecode
is a JavaScript library for operations with SMPTE timecodes.
- usable in browser and Node environments;
- supports drop-frame and non-drop-frame codes;
- instantiate timecodes from frame count, string time code or JavaScript Date() objects;
- timecode arithmetics: adding frame counts and other timecodes;
- support of implicit conversiont to
string
(toString()
) andnumber
(valueOf()
);
const Timecode = require('smpte-timecode')
var t = Timecode('00:15:10;03');
t.add('00:02:30;00');
console.log(t.frameCount);
t.subtract(100); //frames
console.log(t.toString());
Timecode = function (timecode, frameRate, dropFrame) {...};
-
timecode
: number, string or Date- Numbers are interpreted as frame count.
- Strings are expected as
"HH:MM:SS:FF"
(non-drop-frame) or"HH:MM:SS;FF"
(drop-frame). The constructor will throw if the string contains invalid timecode, for example frame count above framerate or 0 frames in a drop-frame second. - If
Date()
is passed, it is converted to the timecode a master clock would have with a given framerate. Month, date and year discarded.
-
frameRate
: number, optional
one of 24, 25, 29.97, 30, 50, 59.94, or 60 is expected. 29.97 is assumed if the parameter is omitted. -
dropFrame
: boolean, optional
whether the timecode is using drop-frame or non-drop-frame mode. If omitted, andtimecode
is a string, the drop-frame mode is determined based on the ":" or ";" characters separating the frames in thetimecode
parameter. Iftimecode
parameter is not a string, drop-frame assumed for 29.97 and 59.94 framerates, non-drop-frame for all others.
Examples:
var minute = new Timecode('00:01:00:00');
var eightHundredFrames = new Timecode(800,29.97,true);
var wallClock = new Timecode(new Date());
Note: a direct call to Timecode()
returns a Timecode
object too, so both direct
calls and instantiating with new
return the same result:
console.log((new Timecode('00:15:00;00')).toString());
// is the same as
console.log(Timecode('00:15:00;00').toString());
Once a Timecode
object is created, the following member variables are available:
frameCount
: number, total number of framesframeRate
: number, framerate in FPShours
: numberminutes
: numberseconds
: numberframes
: numberdropFrame
: boolean, whether timecode is drop-frame or not
The Timecode
object also provides the following member functions:
add(x)
: Timecode, addsx
to timecode,x
can be a number,Date
orTimecode
subtract(x)
: Timecode, subtractsx
from timecode,x
can be a number,Date
orTimecode
toString()
: string, returns the timecode in "HH:MM:SS:FF" or "HH:MM:SS;FF" formattoString('field')
: string, returns the timecode in VITC format, where timecodes above 30fps are represented as frame.field, i.e. HH:MM:SS:FF.ftoDate()
: date, returns aDate
object using today's date and timecode as wall clockvalueOf()
: number, returnsthis.frameCount
For more usage examples, see the unit tests.
To run tests, make sure you install expect.js
, mocha
, codecov
and istanbul
NPMs locally.
npm install expect.js mocha istanbul codecov
The tests can be run in Node using:
npm test
To run the tests in a browser environment, open the test/smpte-timecode-test.html
file
in a browser.
- 1.2.0
- Added support for 59.94 fps drop-frame expressed without fields - i.e. 00:00:00;59 is 1 frame short of a second;
- Added
.ToString('field')
output in HH:MM:SS;FF.f format;
- 1.1.0
- Fixed the problem with Timecode.add(0) subtracting the frameCount for drop frame timecodes
- https://www.npmjs.com/package/timecode NPM module, which in the end I decided to rewrite. The things I needed would have been breaking changes for anyone who used it.
- http://andrewduncan.net/timecodes/ by Andrew Duncan
License: MIT
Copyright © 2017 Crystal Computer Corp.
http://www.crystalcc.com