...if you mean "black bars", then this is because VLC is doing you a favor: it's displaying ALL of the video (even if it don't fit your resolution/monitor/non-fullscreen-window-size), without automatically stretching or cropping the video. Black bars might be annoying, but it's generally better than the alternatives. stretching = distorted video, cropping = lost video, black bars = perfect video, but not using all of the monitor (or "available space", in the case of a non-fullscreen video)....I just want the screen to stay at the full size with no borders...
...if you post how you are doing this, that would help explain if "black bars" is the problem you are describing. Are you using Crop (c) or Aspect Ratio (a)?...even though on some clips I can manually readjust the size to "fill" the view window it will not stay like that....
...I thought I already understood the question, but now you've made me think you mean black bars.I hope people can understand what I mean by this...
...as far as I know: no, you cannot ask VLC to automatically stretch (distort) or crop the video. You can manually do it tho, on a per-video basis (which I think you are already doing)...& with a Lua extension, I would assume it might be possible for a script to do this automatically, but don't quote me on that, as I haven't looked into it.Is there any way of setting the player config/settings to be able to do this
...what?...now you say "no cropping"...so you DO want the video stretched, but not cropped? Cropping at least displays the video "correctly", although missing some stuff around the edges. Stretching, really effs up the video/people. Aspect Ratio (Stretching), should only be used to "fix" a video that's inherently wrong, not to eff up a video that was fine....that is with no size cropping of the viewing area)
Hotkey o = Toggle autoscalingLet's start with a picture, so we're not talking past each other: [img]
See how the none of the edges of the picture are touching the edges of the screen, the edges of the player window? That shouldn't be happening. It should be filling the screen.
Nope. The options are small and still too small.Hotkey o = Toggle autoscaling
As already noted, this looks like your input signal includes back bar. YOU NEED TO USE CROP.
I'm afraid you have both misunderstood what OP is asking for.I GUESS THIS IS A BIT LATE BUT OH MY GOD ITS SO SIMPLE
----ALWAYS FIT WINDOW------
MPC-HC does have a solution to OP's problem. It's under "Video Frame->Touch Window From Outside". The default in both VLC and MPC-HC using this terminology is "Touch Window From Inside" when auto-zooming. I have been wishing for this ability in VLC for many years, but it is not currently possible to solve this.Download and Install Media player classic.
Play video.
Rightclick-Video frame-Zoom 1
Thank me later
Ps.
Dear Vlc team, be kind to add this functionality to your player. We all would very much appreciate that.
Much appreciated,
Regards,
Luka
this actually worked. VL got an account out of me to say thanks! :twothumbsup:I GUESS THIS IS A BIT LATE BUT OH MY GOD ITS
SO
SIMPLE
RIGHT CLICK ON THE VIDEO
THEN CLICK VIDEO
ONCE YOU CLICK ON VIDEO, MOVE YOUR CURSOR TO WHERE IT SAYS
----ALWAYS FIT WINDOW------
Thanks a lot, Rémi! That did the trick :^)Fitting to window while preserving the aspect ratio is the default setting. So either you changed the settings, or your input video signal includes black bars. In the latter case, you need to use crop (hotkey is C).
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