James D wrote:Google '1080p/Full HD'movies'. Most will have ~800 height which is... less than 1080 vertical lines.
Much in the same way that "4k movies" don't have 4000 pixel widths even though 4k technically means it should, and much in the same way that 720p TVs will almost always be 768p, and much in the same way that 23.976fps and 29.97fps are commonly called "24fps" and "30fps" even though they're actually different from 24.00fps and 30.00fps.
Just because a term is used in a specific way does not mean it's actually accurate. Most of these come down to human nature of feeling its "close enough", but this causes issues when one is trying to deal with specifics.
James D wrote:The HD/UHD/SD movie standards were exactly created for avoiding this absurd.
HD/UHD/SD is a television standard where the common display is 16:9; movie standards follow different resolutions such as 2k (2048x1080) and 4k (4096x2160) which use the slightly-wider 1.85 aspect ratio.
James D wrote:1488x620 is still above 1366 wide screen. What's your point of pointing it out then?
My point was that the specific "decrease to HD" function is therefore not particularly beneficial to those 768p users and they'd be better served by "decrease to screen" (which is SVP's default setting anyway).
James D wrote:I pointed that SVP follows standards as everybody else to avoid all sorts of problems and backed it up.
There's nothing wrong with SVP's current resizing behavior, but its exposed functionality is a bit limited when compared to SVP 3.1 nevertheless.
James D wrote:2. SVP handles standards, not specific situations which are numerous while standards were meant to deal with those efficiently. Period.
SVP's "resize to screen" handles any resolution including non-standard ones, so the ability for SVP to downsize to such non-standard resolutions.
James D wrote:1. resize to whatever size you want for your specific needs in Pro version. Done.
To evaluate my previous answer: frc/frame/resize. XXXXXXXX form (ex. 13660768 for 768p).
My apologies but I was completely unaware of the existence of this setting under "all settings".
Nevertheless, I'm at a loss on how to actually use such a setting on a per-profile basis as my understanding is that such settings are applied globally.