Skip to main content

VideoDecoder

Struct VideoDecoder 

Source
pub struct VideoDecoder { /* private fields */ }
Expand description

A video decoder for extracting frames from media files.

The decoder provides frame-by-frame access to video content with support for seeking, hardware acceleration, and format conversion.

§Construction

Use VideoDecoder::open() to create a builder, then call VideoDecoderBuilder::build():

use ff_decode::VideoDecoder;
use ff_format::PixelFormat;

let decoder = VideoDecoder::open("video.mp4")?
    .output_format(PixelFormat::Rgba)
    .build()?;

§Frame Decoding

Frames can be decoded one at a time or using the built-in iterator:

// Decode one frame
if let Some(frame) = decoder.decode_one()? {
    println!("Frame at {:?}", frame.timestamp().as_duration());
}

// Iterator form — VideoDecoder implements Iterator directly
for result in &mut decoder {
    let frame = result?;
    // Process frame...
}

§Seeking

The decoder supports efficient seeking:

use ff_decode::SeekMode;
use std::time::Duration;

// Seek to 30 seconds (keyframe)
decoder.seek(Duration::from_secs(30), SeekMode::Keyframe)?;

// Seek to exact frame
decoder.seek(Duration::from_secs(30), SeekMode::Exact)?;

Implementations§

Source§

impl VideoDecoder

Source

pub fn open(path: impl AsRef<Path>) -> VideoDecoderBuilder

Opens a media file and returns a builder for configuring the decoder.

This is the entry point for creating a decoder. The returned builder allows setting options before the decoder is fully initialized.

§Arguments
  • path - Path to the media file to decode.
§Examples
use ff_decode::VideoDecoder;

// Simple usage
let decoder = VideoDecoder::open("video.mp4")?
    .build()?;

// With options
let decoder = VideoDecoder::open("video.mp4")?
    .output_format(PixelFormat::Rgba)
    .hardware_accel(HardwareAccel::Auto)
    .build()?;
§Note

This method does not validate that the file exists or is a valid media file. Validation occurs when VideoDecoderBuilder::build() is called.

Source

pub fn stream_info(&self) -> &VideoStreamInfo

Returns the video stream information.

This contains metadata about the video stream including resolution, frame rate, codec, and color characteristics.

Source

pub fn width(&self) -> u32

Returns the video width in pixels.

Source

pub fn height(&self) -> u32

Returns the video height in pixels.

Source

pub fn frame_rate(&self) -> f64

Returns the frame rate in frames per second.

Source

pub fn duration(&self) -> Duration

Returns the total duration of the video.

Returns Duration::ZERO if duration is unknown.

Source

pub fn duration_opt(&self) -> Option<Duration>

Returns the total duration of the video, or None for live streams or formats that do not carry duration information.

Source

pub fn container_info(&self) -> &ContainerInfo

Returns container-level metadata (format name, bitrate, stream count).

Source

pub fn position(&self) -> Duration

Returns the current playback position.

Source

pub fn is_eof(&self) -> bool

Returns true if the end of stream has been reached.

Source

pub fn path(&self) -> &Path

Returns the file path being decoded.

Source

pub fn frame_pool(&self) -> Option<&Arc<dyn FramePool>>

Returns a reference to the frame pool, if configured.

Source

pub fn hardware_accel(&self) -> HardwareAccel

Returns the currently active hardware acceleration mode.

This method returns the actual hardware acceleration being used, which may differ from what was requested:

§Examples
use ff_decode::{VideoDecoder, HardwareAccel};

// Request automatic hardware acceleration
let decoder = VideoDecoder::open("video.mp4")?
    .hardware_accel(HardwareAccel::Auto)
    .build()?;

// Check which accelerator was selected
match decoder.hardware_accel() {
    HardwareAccel::None => println!("Using software decoding"),
    HardwareAccel::Nvdec => println!("Using NVIDIA NVDEC"),
    HardwareAccel::Qsv => println!("Using Intel Quick Sync"),
    HardwareAccel::VideoToolbox => println!("Using Apple VideoToolbox"),
    HardwareAccel::Vaapi => println!("Using VA-API"),
    HardwareAccel::Amf => println!("Using AMD AMF"),
    _ => unreachable!(),
}
Source

pub fn decode_one(&mut self) -> Result<Option<VideoFrame>, DecodeError>

Decodes the next video frame.

This method reads and decodes a single frame from the video stream. Frames are returned in presentation order.

§Returns
  • Ok(Some(frame)) - A frame was successfully decoded
  • Ok(None) - End of stream reached, no more frames
  • Err(_) - An error occurred during decoding
§Errors

Returns DecodeError if:

  • Reading from the file fails
  • Decoding the frame fails
  • Pixel format conversion fails
§Examples
use ff_decode::VideoDecoder;

let mut decoder = VideoDecoder::open("video.mp4")?.build()?;

while let Some(frame) = decoder.decode_one()? {
    println!("Frame at {:?}", frame.timestamp().as_duration());
    // Process frame...
}
Source

pub fn decode_range( &mut self, start: Duration, end: Duration, ) -> Result<Vec<VideoFrame>, DecodeError>

Decodes all frames within a specified time range.

This method seeks to the start position and decodes all frames until the end position is reached. Frames outside the range are skipped.

§Performance
  • The method performs a keyframe seek to the start position
  • Frames before start (from nearest keyframe) are decoded but discarded
  • All frames within [start, end) are collected and returned
  • The decoder position after this call will be at or past end

For large time ranges or high frame rates, this may allocate significant memory. Consider iterating manually with decode_one() for very large ranges.

§Arguments
  • start - Start of the time range (inclusive).
  • end - End of the time range (exclusive).
§Returns

A vector of frames with timestamps in the range [start, end). Frames are returned in presentation order.

§Errors

Returns DecodeError if:

  • Seeking to the start position fails
  • Decoding frames fails
  • The time range is invalid (start >= end)
§Examples
use ff_decode::VideoDecoder;
use std::time::Duration;

let mut decoder = VideoDecoder::open("video.mp4")?.build()?;

// Decode frames from 5s to 10s
let frames = decoder.decode_range(
    Duration::from_secs(5),
    Duration::from_secs(10),
)?;

println!("Decoded {} frames", frames.len());
for frame in frames {
    println!("Frame at {:?}", frame.timestamp().as_duration());
}
§Memory Usage

At 30fps, a 5-second range will allocate ~150 frames. For 1080p RGBA:

  • Each frame: ~8.3 MB (1920 × 1080 × 4 bytes)
  • 150 frames: ~1.25 GB

Consider using a frame pool to reduce allocation overhead.

Source

pub fn seek( &mut self, position: Duration, mode: SeekMode, ) -> Result<(), DecodeError>

Seeks to a specified position in the video stream.

This method performs efficient seeking without reopening the file, providing significantly better performance than file-reopen-based seeking (5-10ms vs 50-100ms).

§Performance
  • Keyframe seeking: 5-10ms (typical GOP 1-2s)
  • Exact seeking: 10-50ms depending on GOP size
  • Backward seeking: Similar to keyframe seeking

For videos with large GOP sizes (>5 seconds), exact seeking may take longer as it requires decoding all frames from the nearest keyframe to the target.

§Choosing a Seek Mode
§Arguments
  • position - Target position to seek to.
  • mode - Seek mode determining accuracy and performance.
§Errors

Returns DecodeError::SeekFailed if:

  • The target position is beyond the video duration
  • The file format doesn’t support seeking
  • The seek operation fails internally
§Examples
use ff_decode::{VideoDecoder, SeekMode};
use std::time::Duration;

let mut decoder = VideoDecoder::open("video.mp4")?.build()?;

// Fast seek to 30 seconds (keyframe)
decoder.seek(Duration::from_secs(30), SeekMode::Keyframe)?;

// Exact seek to 1 minute
decoder.seek(Duration::from_secs(60), SeekMode::Exact)?;

// Seek and decode next frame
decoder.seek(Duration::from_secs(10), SeekMode::Keyframe)?;
if let Some(frame) = decoder.decode_one()? {
    println!("Frame at {:?}", frame.timestamp().as_duration());
}
Source

pub fn flush(&mut self)

Flushes the decoder’s internal buffers.

This method clears any cached frames and resets the decoder state. The decoder is ready to receive new packets after flushing.

§When to Use
  • After seeking to ensure clean state
  • Before switching between different parts of the video
  • To clear buffered frames after errors
§Examples
use ff_decode::VideoDecoder;

let mut decoder = VideoDecoder::open("video.mp4")?.build()?;

// Decode some frames...
for _ in 0..10 {
    decoder.decode_one()?;
}

// Flush and start fresh
decoder.flush();
§Note

Calling seek() automatically flushes the decoder, so you don’t need to call this method explicitly after seeking.

Source

pub fn thumbnail_at( &mut self, position: Duration, width: u32, height: u32, ) -> Result<Option<VideoFrame>, DecodeError>

Generates a thumbnail at a specific timestamp.

This method seeks to the specified position, decodes a frame, and scales it to the target dimensions. It’s optimized for thumbnail generation by using keyframe seeking for speed.

§Performance
  • Seeking: 5-10ms (keyframe mode)
  • Decoding: 5-10ms for 1080p H.264
  • Scaling: 1-3ms for 1080p → 320x180
  • Total: ~10-25ms per thumbnail
§Aspect Ratio

The thumbnail preserves the video’s aspect ratio using a “fit-within” strategy. The output dimensions will be at most the target size, with at least one dimension matching the target. No letterboxing is applied.

§Arguments
  • position - Timestamp to extract the thumbnail from.
  • width - Target thumbnail width in pixels.
  • height - Target thumbnail height in pixels.
§Returns

A scaled VideoFrame representing the thumbnail.

§Errors

Returns DecodeError if:

  • Seeking to the position fails
  • No frame can be decoded at that position (returns Ok(None))
  • Scaling fails
§Examples
use ff_decode::VideoDecoder;
use std::time::Duration;

let mut decoder = VideoDecoder::open("video.mp4")?.build()?;

// Generate a 320x180 thumbnail at 5 seconds
let thumbnail = decoder.thumbnail_at(
    Duration::from_secs(5),
    320,
    180,
)?;

assert_eq!(thumbnail.width(), 320);
assert_eq!(thumbnail.height(), 180);
§Use Cases
  • Video player scrubbing preview
  • Timeline thumbnail strips
  • Gallery view thumbnails
  • Social media preview images
Source

pub fn thumbnails( &mut self, count: usize, width: u32, height: u32, ) -> Result<Vec<VideoFrame>, DecodeError>

Generates multiple thumbnails evenly distributed across the video.

This method creates a series of thumbnails by dividing the video duration into equal intervals and extracting a frame at each position. This is commonly used for timeline preview strips or video galleries.

§Performance

For a 2-minute video generating 10 thumbnails:

Performance scales linearly with the number of thumbnails.

§Thumbnail Positions

Thumbnails are extracted at evenly spaced intervals:

  • Position 0: 0s
  • Position 1: duration / count
  • Position 2: 2 * (duration / count)
  • Position N-1: (N-1) * (duration / count)
§Arguments
  • count - Number of thumbnails to generate.
  • width - Target thumbnail width in pixels.
  • height - Target thumbnail height in pixels.
§Returns

A vector of VideoFrame thumbnails in temporal order.

§Errors

Returns DecodeError if:

§Examples
use ff_decode::VideoDecoder;

let mut decoder = VideoDecoder::open("video.mp4")?.build()?;

// Generate 10 thumbnails at 160x90 resolution
let thumbnails = decoder.thumbnails(10, 160, 90)?;

assert_eq!(thumbnails.len(), 10);
for thumb in thumbnails {
    assert_eq!(thumb.width(), 160);
    assert_eq!(thumb.height(), 90);
}
§Use Cases
  • Timeline preview strips (like YouTube’s timeline hover)
  • Video gallery grid views
  • Storyboard generation for editing
  • Video summary/preview pages
§Memory Usage

For 10 thumbnails at 160x90 RGBA:

  • Per thumbnail: ~56 KB (160 × 90 × 4 bytes)
  • Total: ~560 KB

This is typically acceptable, but consider using a smaller resolution or generating thumbnails on-demand for very large thumbnail counts.

Trait Implementations§

Source§

impl Iterator for VideoDecoder

Source§

type Item = Result<VideoFrame, DecodeError>

The type of the elements being iterated over.
Source§

fn next(&mut self) -> Option<Self::Item>

Advances the iterator and returns the next value. Read more
Source§

fn next_chunk<const N: usize>( &mut self, ) -> Result<[Self::Item; N], IntoIter<Self::Item, N>>
where Self: Sized,

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (iter_next_chunk)
Advances the iterator and returns an array containing the next N values. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn size_hint(&self) -> (usize, Option<usize>)

Returns the bounds on the remaining length of the iterator. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn count(self) -> usize
where Self: Sized,

Consumes the iterator, counting the number of iterations and returning it. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn last(self) -> Option<Self::Item>
where Self: Sized,

Consumes the iterator, returning the last element. Read more
Source§

fn advance_by(&mut self, n: usize) -> Result<(), NonZero<usize>>

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (iter_advance_by)
Advances the iterator by n elements. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn nth(&mut self, n: usize) -> Option<Self::Item>

Returns the nth element of the iterator. Read more
1.28.0 · Source§

fn step_by(self, step: usize) -> StepBy<Self>
where Self: Sized,

Creates an iterator starting at the same point, but stepping by the given amount at each iteration. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn chain<U>(self, other: U) -> Chain<Self, <U as IntoIterator>::IntoIter>
where Self: Sized, U: IntoIterator<Item = Self::Item>,

Takes two iterators and creates a new iterator over both in sequence. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn zip<U>(self, other: U) -> Zip<Self, <U as IntoIterator>::IntoIter>
where Self: Sized, U: IntoIterator,

‘Zips up’ two iterators into a single iterator of pairs. Read more
Source§

fn intersperse(self, separator: Self::Item) -> Intersperse<Self>
where Self: Sized, Self::Item: Clone,

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (iter_intersperse)
Creates a new iterator which places a copy of separator between items of the original iterator. Read more
Source§

fn intersperse_with<G>(self, separator: G) -> IntersperseWith<Self, G>
where Self: Sized, G: FnMut() -> Self::Item,

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (iter_intersperse)
Creates a new iterator which places an item generated by separator between items of the original iterator. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn map<B, F>(self, f: F) -> Map<Self, F>
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(Self::Item) -> B,

Takes a closure and creates an iterator which calls that closure on each element. Read more
1.21.0 · Source§

fn for_each<F>(self, f: F)
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(Self::Item),

Calls a closure on each element of an iterator. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn filter<P>(self, predicate: P) -> Filter<Self, P>
where Self: Sized, P: FnMut(&Self::Item) -> bool,

Creates an iterator which uses a closure to determine if an element should be yielded. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn filter_map<B, F>(self, f: F) -> FilterMap<Self, F>
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(Self::Item) -> Option<B>,

Creates an iterator that both filters and maps. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn enumerate(self) -> Enumerate<Self>
where Self: Sized,

Creates an iterator which gives the current iteration count as well as the next value. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn peekable(self) -> Peekable<Self>
where Self: Sized,

Creates an iterator which can use the peek and peek_mut methods to look at the next element of the iterator without consuming it. See their documentation for more information. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn skip_while<P>(self, predicate: P) -> SkipWhile<Self, P>
where Self: Sized, P: FnMut(&Self::Item) -> bool,

Creates an iterator that skips elements based on a predicate. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn take_while<P>(self, predicate: P) -> TakeWhile<Self, P>
where Self: Sized, P: FnMut(&Self::Item) -> bool,

Creates an iterator that yields elements based on a predicate. Read more
1.57.0 · Source§

fn map_while<B, P>(self, predicate: P) -> MapWhile<Self, P>
where Self: Sized, P: FnMut(Self::Item) -> Option<B>,

Creates an iterator that both yields elements based on a predicate and maps. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn skip(self, n: usize) -> Skip<Self>
where Self: Sized,

Creates an iterator that skips the first n elements. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn take(self, n: usize) -> Take<Self>
where Self: Sized,

Creates an iterator that yields the first n elements, or fewer if the underlying iterator ends sooner. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn scan<St, B, F>(self, initial_state: St, f: F) -> Scan<Self, St, F>
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(&mut St, Self::Item) -> Option<B>,

An iterator adapter which, like fold, holds internal state, but unlike fold, produces a new iterator. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn flat_map<U, F>(self, f: F) -> FlatMap<Self, U, F>
where Self: Sized, U: IntoIterator, F: FnMut(Self::Item) -> U,

Creates an iterator that works like map, but flattens nested structure. Read more
1.29.0 · Source§

fn flatten(self) -> Flatten<Self>
where Self: Sized, Self::Item: IntoIterator,

Creates an iterator that flattens nested structure. Read more
Source§

fn map_windows<F, R, const N: usize>(self, f: F) -> MapWindows<Self, F, N>
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(&[Self::Item; N]) -> R,

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (iter_map_windows)
Calls the given function f for each contiguous window of size N over self and returns an iterator over the outputs of f. Like slice::windows(), the windows during mapping overlap as well. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn fuse(self) -> Fuse<Self>
where Self: Sized,

Creates an iterator which ends after the first None. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn inspect<F>(self, f: F) -> Inspect<Self, F>
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(&Self::Item),

Does something with each element of an iterator, passing the value on. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn by_ref(&mut self) -> &mut Self
where Self: Sized,

Creates a “by reference” adapter for this instance of Iterator. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn collect<B>(self) -> B
where B: FromIterator<Self::Item>, Self: Sized,

Transforms an iterator into a collection. Read more
Source§

fn try_collect<B>( &mut self, ) -> <<Self::Item as Try>::Residual as Residual<B>>::TryType
where Self: Sized, Self::Item: Try, <Self::Item as Try>::Residual: Residual<B>, B: FromIterator<<Self::Item as Try>::Output>,

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (iterator_try_collect)
Fallibly transforms an iterator into a collection, short circuiting if a failure is encountered. Read more
Source§

fn collect_into<E>(self, collection: &mut E) -> &mut E
where E: Extend<Self::Item>, Self: Sized,

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (iter_collect_into)
Collects all the items from an iterator into a collection. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn partition<B, F>(self, f: F) -> (B, B)
where Self: Sized, B: Default + Extend<Self::Item>, F: FnMut(&Self::Item) -> bool,

Consumes an iterator, creating two collections from it. Read more
Source§

fn is_partitioned<P>(self, predicate: P) -> bool
where Self: Sized, P: FnMut(Self::Item) -> bool,

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (iter_is_partitioned)
Checks if the elements of this iterator are partitioned according to the given predicate, such that all those that return true precede all those that return false. Read more
1.27.0 · Source§

fn try_fold<B, F, R>(&mut self, init: B, f: F) -> R
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(B, Self::Item) -> R, R: Try<Output = B>,

An iterator method that applies a function as long as it returns successfully, producing a single, final value. Read more
1.27.0 · Source§

fn try_for_each<F, R>(&mut self, f: F) -> R
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(Self::Item) -> R, R: Try<Output = ()>,

An iterator method that applies a fallible function to each item in the iterator, stopping at the first error and returning that error. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn fold<B, F>(self, init: B, f: F) -> B
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(B, Self::Item) -> B,

Folds every element into an accumulator by applying an operation, returning the final result. Read more
1.51.0 · Source§

fn reduce<F>(self, f: F) -> Option<Self::Item>
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(Self::Item, Self::Item) -> Self::Item,

Reduces the elements to a single one, by repeatedly applying a reducing operation. Read more
Source§

fn try_reduce<R>( &mut self, f: impl FnMut(Self::Item, Self::Item) -> R, ) -> <<R as Try>::Residual as Residual<Option<<R as Try>::Output>>>::TryType
where Self: Sized, R: Try<Output = Self::Item>, <R as Try>::Residual: Residual<Option<Self::Item>>,

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (iterator_try_reduce)
Reduces the elements to a single one by repeatedly applying a reducing operation. If the closure returns a failure, the failure is propagated back to the caller immediately. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn all<F>(&mut self, f: F) -> bool
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(Self::Item) -> bool,

Tests if every element of the iterator matches a predicate. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn any<F>(&mut self, f: F) -> bool
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(Self::Item) -> bool,

Tests if any element of the iterator matches a predicate. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn find<P>(&mut self, predicate: P) -> Option<Self::Item>
where Self: Sized, P: FnMut(&Self::Item) -> bool,

Searches for an element of an iterator that satisfies a predicate. Read more
1.30.0 · Source§

fn find_map<B, F>(&mut self, f: F) -> Option<B>
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(Self::Item) -> Option<B>,

Applies function to the elements of iterator and returns the first non-none result. Read more
Source§

fn try_find<R>( &mut self, f: impl FnMut(&Self::Item) -> R, ) -> <<R as Try>::Residual as Residual<Option<Self::Item>>>::TryType
where Self: Sized, R: Try<Output = bool>, <R as Try>::Residual: Residual<Option<Self::Item>>,

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (try_find)
Applies function to the elements of iterator and returns the first true result or the first error. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn position<P>(&mut self, predicate: P) -> Option<usize>
where Self: Sized, P: FnMut(Self::Item) -> bool,

Searches for an element in an iterator, returning its index. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn max(self) -> Option<Self::Item>
where Self: Sized, Self::Item: Ord,

Returns the maximum element of an iterator. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn min(self) -> Option<Self::Item>
where Self: Sized, Self::Item: Ord,

Returns the minimum element of an iterator. Read more
1.6.0 · Source§

fn max_by_key<B, F>(self, f: F) -> Option<Self::Item>
where B: Ord, Self: Sized, F: FnMut(&Self::Item) -> B,

Returns the element that gives the maximum value from the specified function. Read more
1.15.0 · Source§

fn max_by<F>(self, compare: F) -> Option<Self::Item>
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(&Self::Item, &Self::Item) -> Ordering,

Returns the element that gives the maximum value with respect to the specified comparison function. Read more
1.6.0 · Source§

fn min_by_key<B, F>(self, f: F) -> Option<Self::Item>
where B: Ord, Self: Sized, F: FnMut(&Self::Item) -> B,

Returns the element that gives the minimum value from the specified function. Read more
1.15.0 · Source§

fn min_by<F>(self, compare: F) -> Option<Self::Item>
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(&Self::Item, &Self::Item) -> Ordering,

Returns the element that gives the minimum value with respect to the specified comparison function. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn unzip<A, B, FromA, FromB>(self) -> (FromA, FromB)
where FromA: Default + Extend<A>, FromB: Default + Extend<B>, Self: Sized + Iterator<Item = (A, B)>,

Converts an iterator of pairs into a pair of containers. Read more
1.36.0 · Source§

fn copied<'a, T>(self) -> Copied<Self>
where T: Copy + 'a, Self: Sized + Iterator<Item = &'a T>,

Creates an iterator which copies all of its elements. Read more
1.0.0 · Source§

fn cloned<'a, T>(self) -> Cloned<Self>
where T: Clone + 'a, Self: Sized + Iterator<Item = &'a T>,

Creates an iterator which clones all of its elements. Read more
Source§

fn array_chunks<const N: usize>(self) -> ArrayChunks<Self, N>
where Self: Sized,

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (iter_array_chunks)
Returns an iterator over N elements of the iterator at a time. Read more
1.11.0 · Source§

fn sum<S>(self) -> S
where Self: Sized, S: Sum<Self::Item>,

Sums the elements of an iterator. Read more
1.11.0 · Source§

fn product<P>(self) -> P
where Self: Sized, P: Product<Self::Item>,

Iterates over the entire iterator, multiplying all the elements Read more
1.5.0 · Source§

fn cmp<I>(self, other: I) -> Ordering
where I: IntoIterator<Item = Self::Item>, Self::Item: Ord, Self: Sized,

Lexicographically compares the elements of this Iterator with those of another. Read more
Source§

fn cmp_by<I, F>(self, other: I, cmp: F) -> Ordering
where Self: Sized, I: IntoIterator, F: FnMut(Self::Item, <I as IntoIterator>::Item) -> Ordering,

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (iter_order_by)
Lexicographically compares the elements of this Iterator with those of another with respect to the specified comparison function. Read more
1.5.0 · Source§

fn partial_cmp<I>(self, other: I) -> Option<Ordering>
where I: IntoIterator, Self::Item: PartialOrd<<I as IntoIterator>::Item>, Self: Sized,

Lexicographically compares the PartialOrd elements of this Iterator with those of another. The comparison works like short-circuit evaluation, returning a result without comparing the remaining elements. As soon as an order can be determined, the evaluation stops and a result is returned. Read more
Source§

fn partial_cmp_by<I, F>(self, other: I, partial_cmp: F) -> Option<Ordering>
where Self: Sized, I: IntoIterator, F: FnMut(Self::Item, <I as IntoIterator>::Item) -> Option<Ordering>,

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (iter_order_by)
Lexicographically compares the elements of this Iterator with those of another with respect to the specified comparison function. Read more
1.5.0 · Source§

fn eq<I>(self, other: I) -> bool
where I: IntoIterator, Self::Item: PartialEq<<I as IntoIterator>::Item>, Self: Sized,

Determines if the elements of this Iterator are equal to those of another. Read more
Source§

fn eq_by<I, F>(self, other: I, eq: F) -> bool
where Self: Sized, I: IntoIterator, F: FnMut(Self::Item, <I as IntoIterator>::Item) -> bool,

🔬This is a nightly-only experimental API. (iter_order_by)
Determines if the elements of this Iterator are equal to those of another with respect to the specified equality function. Read more
1.5.0 · Source§

fn ne<I>(self, other: I) -> bool
where I: IntoIterator, Self::Item: PartialEq<<I as IntoIterator>::Item>, Self: Sized,

Determines if the elements of this Iterator are not equal to those of another. Read more
1.5.0 · Source§

fn lt<I>(self, other: I) -> bool
where I: IntoIterator, Self::Item: PartialOrd<<I as IntoIterator>::Item>, Self: Sized,

Determines if the elements of this Iterator are lexicographically less than those of another. Read more
1.5.0 · Source§

fn le<I>(self, other: I) -> bool
where I: IntoIterator, Self::Item: PartialOrd<<I as IntoIterator>::Item>, Self: Sized,

Determines if the elements of this Iterator are lexicographically less or equal to those of another. Read more
1.5.0 · Source§

fn gt<I>(self, other: I) -> bool
where I: IntoIterator, Self::Item: PartialOrd<<I as IntoIterator>::Item>, Self: Sized,

Determines if the elements of this Iterator are lexicographically greater than those of another. Read more
1.5.0 · Source§

fn ge<I>(self, other: I) -> bool
where I: IntoIterator, Self::Item: PartialOrd<<I as IntoIterator>::Item>, Self: Sized,

Determines if the elements of this Iterator are lexicographically greater than or equal to those of another. Read more
1.82.0 · Source§

fn is_sorted(self) -> bool
where Self: Sized, Self::Item: PartialOrd,

Checks if the elements of this iterator are sorted. Read more
1.82.0 · Source§

fn is_sorted_by<F>(self, compare: F) -> bool
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(&Self::Item, &Self::Item) -> bool,

Checks if the elements of this iterator are sorted using the given comparator function. Read more
1.82.0 · Source§

fn is_sorted_by_key<F, K>(self, f: F) -> bool
where Self: Sized, F: FnMut(Self::Item) -> K, K: PartialOrd,

Checks if the elements of this iterator are sorted using the given key extraction function. Read more
Source§

impl FusedIterator for VideoDecoder

Auto Trait Implementations§

Blanket Implementations§

Source§

impl<T> Any for T
where T: 'static + ?Sized,

Source§

fn type_id(&self) -> TypeId

Gets the TypeId of self. Read more
Source§

impl<T> Borrow<T> for T
where T: ?Sized,

Source§

fn borrow(&self) -> &T

Immutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
Source§

impl<T> BorrowMut<T> for T
where T: ?Sized,

Source§

fn borrow_mut(&mut self) -> &mut T

Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
Source§

impl<T> From<T> for T

Source§

fn from(t: T) -> T

Returns the argument unchanged.

Source§

impl<T, U> Into<U> for T
where U: From<T>,

Source§

fn into(self) -> U

Calls U::from(self).

That is, this conversion is whatever the implementation of From<T> for U chooses to do.

Source§

impl<I> IntoIterator for I
where I: Iterator,

Source§

type Item = <I as Iterator>::Item

The type of the elements being iterated over.
Source§

type IntoIter = I

Which kind of iterator are we turning this into?
Source§

fn into_iter(self) -> I

Creates an iterator from a value. Read more
Source§

impl<T, U> TryFrom<U> for T
where U: Into<T>,

Source§

type Error = Infallible

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
Source§

fn try_from(value: U) -> Result<T, <T as TryFrom<U>>::Error>

Performs the conversion.
Source§

impl<T, U> TryInto<U> for T
where U: TryFrom<T>,

Source§

type Error = <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error

The type returned in the event of a conversion error.
Source§

fn try_into(self) -> Result<U, <U as TryFrom<T>>::Error>

Performs the conversion.