/usr/share/psychtoolbox-3/PsychDemos/MovieDemo.m is in psychtoolbox-3-common 3.0.11.20140816.dfsg1-1.
This file is owned by root:root, with mode 0o644.
The actual contents of the file can be viewed below.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 151 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 | function MovieDemo
% MovieDemo
%
% Show a movie, easy as pie.
%
% The comments below review the difference between the OS 9 version of
% the toolbox and PTB-3.
%
% New and different on OS Psychtoolbox:
%
% The OS 9 Psychtoolbox is based on QuickTime and PTB-3 is
% based on OpenGL. Differences between these underlying graphics libraries
% have unavoidably resulted in differences between the OS 9 and PTB-3
% versions of Screen; Some subfunctions of OS 9 Screen are replaced by
% similar, but not identical functions in PTB-3.
%
% In OS 9: In PTB-3
%
% WaitBlanking Flip
% PutImage MakeTexture
% CopyWindow DrawTexture
%
% WaitVBL vs. Flip
%
% In OS 9 an onscreen window consisted of only one buffer: the front
% buffer. Any pixel drawn to an onscreen window would automatically
% appear on the display as soon as the monitor scan passed that pixel,
% the maximum delay between drawing a pixel and its appearnce on the
% monitor being one frame period. To prevent vertical shearing of
% animated displays, Psyhctoolbox scripts called WaitBlanking before
% updating the display. WaitBlanking synchonrized drawing into vide RAM
% wih the monitor scan by delaying the onset of drawing until the scan
% reached the bottom right corener of the display, at which point a
% vertical blank would occur while the CRT beam retraced to the upper
% left corner of the display.
%
% In contrast, PTB-3 onscreen windows by default have not one but two
% buffers: the front buffer and the back buffer. In double-buffered
% mode, all Screen drawing commands are issued to the back buffer, where
% what is drawn is hidden from view. The contents of the back buffer
% remain hidden from view until The Screen('Flip', ...) command is
% issued. Flip waits until the vertical retrace and then interchages the
% contents of the front and back buffers, bringining into view on the
% display what had previosly been hidden in the back buffer.
%
% OpenOffscrenWindow + PutImage + CopyWindow vs. MakeTexture + DrawTexture
%
% In OS 9, PutImage copied a MATLAB matrix into an offsceen window. The
% offscreen Window could then be quickly copied to the display during an
% animation. Thus PutImage was one part of three for quickly
% displaying MATLAB matrices during an animation:
%
% Steps to quickly display an image matrix in OS 9:
% 1. Create an offscreen window by calling OpenOffscreenWindow
% 2. Copy the matrix to an offsceen window using PutImage
% 3. Copy the offscreen window to an onscreen window using
% CopyWindow
%
% Instead of using Offscreen Windows to quickly display MATLAB Matrices
% the OSX Psychtoolbox uses Textures.
%
% Steps to quickly display an image matrix in PTB-3:
% 1. Create a texture and copy into it a matrix by using MakeTexture
% 2. Copy the texture quickly to the onscreen window using
% DrawTexure
%
% What is the difference betwen offscreen windows and textures? The
% difference is that Drawing commands such as FillOval may be issued to
% offscreen windows but not to Textures; You may only fill textures by
% using matrices.
%
% How do we draw ovals during an animation if we can not store them
% within offscren or textures? Unlike QuickDraw, OpenGL is fast enought
% to render all drawing commands directly to the display during an
% animation loop. Except for MATLAB matrices stored in textures, there
% should be no need to prerender and buffer what is displayed during
% animation.
%
% Animation loops: OS 9 VS PTB-3
%
% To understand the differences between OS 9 and PTB-3 Screen its helpful
% to compare animation loops:
%
% OS 9:
%
% %create and fill offscreen windows here...
% for i=1:numberOfMovieFrames
% Screen(window, 'WaitBlanking');
% Screen('CopyWindow', offscreenWindow(i), window);
% end
%
% PTB-3:
%
% %generate textures here...
% for i=1:numberOfMovieFrames
% Screen('DrawTexture', texture(i), window);
% Screen(window, 'Flip');
% end
%
%
% See also: DriftDemo, PsychDemos.
%
%
% HISTORY
%
% 7/3/04 awi Wrote it. Based on Denis Pelli's MovieDemo for OS 9.
% 7/19/04 awi restored Priority, and time tests, added option to plot results.
% 7/24/04 awi Cosmetic
% 9/8/04 awi Added Try/Catch.
% 4/23/05 mk Added Priority(0) to Catch-Section.
% 11/19/06 dhb Remove OSX from name.
try
fprintf('MovieDemo.m is short. Read it to see how easy it \nis to show movies.\n\n');
% If there are multiple displays guess that one without the menu bar is the
% best choice. Dislay 0 has the menu bar.
screens=Screen('Screens');
screenNumber=max(screens);
% Open a window. Note the new argument to OpenWindow with value 2,
% specifying the number of buffers to the onscreen window.
[window,windowRect]=Screen(screenNumber,'OpenWindow',0,[],[],2);
% Give the display a moment to recover from the change of display mode when
% opening a window. It takes some monitors and LCD scan converters a few seconds to resync.
WaitSecs(2);
% Show the movie, first forwards, then backwards. We don't need offscreen
% windows as in OS 9. FillOval is now fast enough to draw ovals during the
% animation.
n=300;
rect=[0 0 n n];
rect2=AlignRect(rect,windowRect,RectRight,RectBottom);
black=BlackIndex(window);
white=WhiteIndex(window);
Screen(window, 'FillRect', white);
Screen(window,'TextColor', black);
%Screen(window, 'TextFont', 'Courier');
%Screen(window,'TextSize',24);
for(i=1:2)
Screen(window, 'FillRect', white);
Screen(window,'DrawText','Showing movie at priority 0 ...',10,30,black);
Screen(window,'Flip');
end
WaitSecs(2)
t=0;
HideCursor;
for i=[1:n/2, n/2:-1:1]
r=[0 0 2 2]*(i);
Screen(window,'FillRect', white);
Screen(window,'FillOval',black,r);
t=t+1;
s(t)=Screen(window, 'Flip');
end
ShowCursor;
s1Diffs=diff(s);
Screen(window, 'FillRect', white);
Screen(window,'DrawText','Showing movie at priority 9 ...',10,30,black);
Screen(window,'Flip');
WaitSecs(2);
priorityLevel=MaxPriority(window);
t=0;
HideCursor;
Priority(priorityLevel);
%this is strange, raising the priority seems to cause the first call to
%flip to return immediatly. Needs investigation.
Screen(window, 'Flip');
for i=[1:n/2, n/2:-1:1]
r=[0 0 2 2]*(i);
Screen(window,'FillRect', white);
Screen(window,'FillOval',black,r);
t=t+1;
s(t)=Screen(window, 'Flip');
end
Priority(0);
ShowCursor;
s2Diffs=diff(s);
% In OS 9 we checked for missed frames by comparing the actual movie play
% duration to the expected duration as predicted by the number of frames
% shown and the frame rate reported by Screen('FrameRate'). However,
% FrameRate on PTB-3 returns the nominal frame rate reported by the video
% card driver. That is imprecise. So instead, we use the median frame
% period, which will work except for in case of egregious synching failure.
frameRate=1/median(s2Diffs);
frames1=sum(s1Diffs)*frameRate-length(s1Diffs);
frames2=sum(s2Diffs)*frameRate-length(s2Diffs);
% Close the on- and off-screen windows
Screen('CloseAll');
if round(frames1)==0 && round(frames2)==0
s=sprintf('Success! The movie was shown twice. Both showings were frame-accurate.');
else
s=sprintf('The movie was shown twice, running over by %.0f frames in the first and %.0f frames in the second showing.',frames1,frames2);
end
s=sprintf('%s The first showing may have been jerky, due to interruptions. The second showing used Priority, at priority %g, to minimize interruptions, to make the movie run smoothly. See Priority and Rush.',s,priorityLevel);
fprintf('%s\n',WrapString(s));
doPlotInput=input('Plot frame intervals [y/n]? ','s');
if streq(upper(doPlotInput), 'Y') || strcmpi(doPlotInput, 'YES')
plot(s2Diffs);
xlabel('frame number');
ylabel('interval (seconds)');
end %if
catch
%this "catch" section executes in case of an error in the "try" section
%above. Importantly, it closes the onscreen window if its open.
Screen('CloseAll');
ShowCursor;
Priority(0);
psychrethrow(psychlasterror);
end % try..catch
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