A clone of Media Player Classic reimplemented in Qt.
Media Player Classic Home Cinema (mpc-hc) is considered by many to be the quintessential media player for the Windows desktop. Media Player Classic Qute Theater (mpc-qt) aims to reproduce most of the interface and functionality of mpc-hc while using libmpv to play video instead of DirectShow.
There is no RC. Despite this situation, you may test it out and determine if what works is satisfying for you. If not, please open an issue that may motivate the developer in a helpful direction.
The best version is git master, and everyone are encouraged to increase their computer-fu by compiling from source. (see sections below.) Compiling from source gives you several advantages over the usual user, such the ability to use latest and pre-release software regardless of where it comes from. Unix users, there could even be packages in your distro that help with this. (e.g. aur, ports.)
There are builds for Windows users on the release page. Every now and then the developer makes a Windows build based on a recent commit and posts it on the releases page. These use time-based versioning (e.g. 17.07 corresponds to 2017 July), are provided for the convenience of Windows users who usually do not have a development environment, and should not be considered to represent any serious release-worthy snapshot in any way. This may change when the program is more feature-complete.
Nearly everything that mpc-hc does. For the most part, unwritten portions relate to setting options and streaming from devices.
Multiple playlists: When you're watching shows on your backlog, load every show into separate playlists and still keep track of the last played file for each playlist. Finally you can eliminate the need to keep track of your progress in a spreadsheet, all while never leaving the comfort of your favorite media player.
Quick queuing: Out-of-order playback in the same style of xmms/qmmp. Got some compilation albums in a playlist, but want to hear only some rock tracks for a while? Now you can, without obliterating your playlist.
Playlist searching: Multi-threaded playlist searching, in the same style as other media players. Find the tracks you want, when you want them.
Screenshot templates: Take screenshots with a custom, sleek and stylized filename. Only include the information that you want.
Looped playback: Selectively show part of video/music tracks. Amazing, isn't it?
Custom metadata: Display custom metadata in the playlist window. Want to show the artist as well as the title, down to even the encoder used? Nothing is stopping you.
Native filter-chain support: Comprehensive integration of mpv/ffmpeg's filter interface/library, right inside your media player.
Encoding support like VirtualDub: Churn out memes faster. No need to open a video editor when your media player can do your job for you.
Race Inspired Cosmetic Enhancements: In-app custom styling support.
Suggestions welcome.
You need the Qt5 SDK installed and a recent edition of libmpv. On Ubuntu you
can usually install the required libraries with the qtcreator
,
qt5-default
, libqt5x11extras5-dev
, qttools5-dev-tools
and
libmpv-dev
packages. A recent edition of libmpv means either from git
head or at least version 0.29.0. The mpv options for this are
--enable-libmpv-shared
for shared library support, and
--enable-libarchive
if you want to use mpc-qt as a comic book viewer.
First ensure you have the prerequisites as mentioned above, then open a terminal
and cd
into your general source-code directory. If one does not exist,
mkdir
one.
mkdir src
cd ~/src
Then clone this git repository using the following command:
git clone https://github.com/cmdrkotori/mpc-qt.git
Finally, cd
into the checked-out repository.
cd mpc-qt
Then build with qmake+make.
qmake
make -j threads
sudo make install
You're done! Later on, performing a git pull from inside the source code directory will get the latest changes.
git pull origin master
Rebuild by following the qmake+make steps as described above.
Some distros have an ancient version of mpv in their repos. You can install libmpv in the following method:
Uninstall any libmpv package you may have.
sudo apt purge libmpv-dev
Fetch the mpv-build repo.
cd ~/src
cd mpv-build
Select the master versions to compile.
./use-ffmpeg-master
./use-libass-master
./use-mpv-master
Follow the instructions for debian and ubuntu about making a build-deps package. (or whatever method for your distro.)
sudo apt-get install git devscripts equivs
rm -f mpv-build-deps_*_*.deb
mk-build-deps -s sudo -i
Build libmpv.
echo --enable-libmpv-shared > mpv_options
./update
./build -j4
sudo ./install
sudo ldconfig
libmpv should now be installed to /usr/local/*
.
While this program is meant for Unix, it is possible to compile it on Windows
with the MSYS2 edition of Qt Creator due to the largely cross-platform Qt
toolkit. MSVC is not supported. In addition, the build process needs the
imagemagick, librsvg and inkscape packages to create the windows ico file.
Use pacman -Ss <package description/name/etc>
to find them.
Mpc-Qt can be compiled with a libmpv linked to MSYS2's ffmpeg libraries, or by
using the prebuilt library from mpv.srsfckn.biz. To use the prebuilt library
after cloning this repository, download libmpv from the
mpv windows release page, and extract it somewhere. Place the libraries for
your architechture from mpv-dev.7z (e.g. mpv-dev.7z/64
) into mpv-dev/lib
.
Then place the include files from mpv-dev.7z (usually at mpv-dev.zip/include
)
into mpv-dev/include/mpv
. Compile with the 64bit Qt framework as usual.
Bleeding-edge git master builds that use new features not yet in a release can usually be made with shinchiro builds of libmpv. Unpack in the same manner as above.