05.06.2024, 23:41
Can you tell me, studying vs-placebo github link, I found several commands that are not presented in Hybrid's Tonemap (Placebo) settings section, these are:
metadata: Data source to use when tone-mapping. Setting this to a specific value allows overriding the default metadata preference logic. Defaults to 0 (automatic selection).
0 Automatic selection
1 None (disabled)
2 HDR10 (static)
3 HDR10+ (MaxRGB)
4 Luminance (CIE Y)
visualize_lut: Display a (PQ-PQ) graph of the active tone-mapping LUT. See mpv docs.
show_clipping: Highlight hard-clipped pixels during tone-mapping.
contrast_recovery: HDR contrast recovery strength. If set to a value above 0.0, the source image will be divided into high-frequency and low-frequency components, and a portion of the high-frequency image is added back onto the tone-mapped output. May cause excessive ringing artifacts for some HDR sources, but can improve the subjective sharpness and detail left over in the image after tone-mapping. Defaults to 0.0.
Can the default settings of these commands (one of them) give the autobrightness effect that we were talking about?
metadata: Data source to use when tone-mapping. Setting this to a specific value allows overriding the default metadata preference logic. Defaults to 0 (automatic selection).
0 Automatic selection
1 None (disabled)
2 HDR10 (static)
3 HDR10+ (MaxRGB)
4 Luminance (CIE Y)
visualize_lut: Display a (PQ-PQ) graph of the active tone-mapping LUT. See mpv docs.
show_clipping: Highlight hard-clipped pixels during tone-mapping.
contrast_recovery: HDR contrast recovery strength. If set to a value above 0.0, the source image will be divided into high-frequency and low-frequency components, and a portion of the high-frequency image is added back onto the tone-mapped output. May cause excessive ringing artifacts for some HDR sources, but can improve the subjective sharpness and detail left over in the image after tone-mapping. Defaults to 0.0.
Can the default settings of these commands (one of them) give the autobrightness effect that we were talking about?