VideoTools/vendor/github.com/BurntSushi/toml
Stu Leak 68df790d27 Fix player frame generation and video playback
Major improvements to UnifiedPlayer:

1. GetFrameImage() now works when paused for responsive UI updates
2. Play() method properly starts FFmpeg process
3. Frame display loop runs continuously for smooth video display
4. Disabled audio temporarily to fix video playback fundamentals
5. Simplified FFmpeg command to focus on video stream only

Player now:
- Generates video frames correctly
- Shows video when paused
- Has responsive progress tracking
- Starts playback properly

Next steps: Re-enable audio playback once video is stable
2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
..
internal Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
.gitignore Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
COPYING Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
decode.go Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
deprecated.go Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
doc.go Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
encode.go Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
error.go Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
lex.go Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
meta.go Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
parse.go Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
README.md Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
type_fields.go Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00
type_toml.go Fix player frame generation and video playback 2026-01-07 22:20:00 -05:00

TOML stands for Tom's Obvious, Minimal Language. This Go package provides a reflection interface similar to Go's standard library json and xml packages.

Compatible with TOML version v1.0.0.

Documentation: https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/BurntSushi/toml

See the releases page for a changelog; this information is also in the git tag annotations (e.g. git show v0.4.0).

This library requires Go 1.18 or newer; add it to your go.mod with:

% go get github.com/BurntSushi/toml@latest

It also comes with a TOML validator CLI tool:

% go install github.com/BurntSushi/toml/cmd/tomlv@latest
% tomlv some-toml-file.toml

Examples

For the simplest example, consider some TOML file as just a list of keys and values:

Age = 25
Cats = [ "Cauchy", "Plato" ]
Pi = 3.14
Perfection = [ 6, 28, 496, 8128 ]
DOB = 1987-07-05T05:45:00Z

Which can be decoded with:

type Config struct {
	Age        int
	Cats       []string
	Pi         float64
	Perfection []int
	DOB        time.Time
}

var conf Config
_, err := toml.Decode(tomlData, &conf)

You can also use struct tags if your struct field name doesn't map to a TOML key value directly:

some_key_NAME = "wat"
type TOML struct {
    ObscureKey string `toml:"some_key_NAME"`
}

Beware that like other decoders only exported fields are considered when encoding and decoding; private fields are silently ignored.

Using the Marshaler and encoding.TextUnmarshaler interfaces

Here's an example that automatically parses values in a mail.Address:

contacts = [
    "Donald Duck <donald@duckburg.com>",
    "Scrooge McDuck <scrooge@duckburg.com>",
]

Can be decoded with:

// Create address type which satisfies the encoding.TextUnmarshaler interface.
type address struct {
	*mail.Address
}

func (a *address) UnmarshalText(text []byte) error {
	var err error
	a.Address, err = mail.ParseAddress(string(text))
	return err
}

// Decode it.
func decode() {
	blob := `
		contacts = [
			"Donald Duck <donald@duckburg.com>",
			"Scrooge McDuck <scrooge@duckburg.com>",
		]
	`

	var contacts struct {
		Contacts []address
	}

	_, err := toml.Decode(blob, &contacts)
	if err != nil {
		log.Fatal(err)
	}

	for _, c := range contacts.Contacts {
		fmt.Printf("%#v\n", c.Address)
	}

	// Output:
	// &mail.Address{Name:"Donald Duck", Address:"donald@duckburg.com"}
	// &mail.Address{Name:"Scrooge McDuck", Address:"scrooge@duckburg.com"}
}

To target TOML specifically you can implement UnmarshalTOML TOML interface in a similar way.

More complex usage

See the _example/ directory for a more complex example.