Last updated: Dec-11-2024
Overview
After uploading videos to Cloudinary, they can be transformed in many ways.
The syntax for transforming and delivering videos is generally similar to that for images, and you can apply the majority of available image transformations to video as well. For example, you can resize, crop, rotate, set video quality and format or use auto quality and/or auto format, add text or image overlays to your videos, and more.
There are also a number of special options you can use for transforming and delivering video content. For example, you can adjust their size, shape, speed, duration, quality, and appearance. There are also some features that are specific to audio.
This section introduces you to the basics of Angular video streaming and transformation.
For complete details on all video transformation functionality, see Video transformations and the Transformation URL API Reference.
- The video transformation reference shows all transformation options using
snake_case
, but the Angular SDK transformation attributes supportkebab-case
. You can apply the kebab-case style to all transformation attributes. - If you find that any of the Cloudinary transformation attributes conflict with attribute directives from another package, you can prefix the transformation attributes with
cld
. For example, instead ofresponsive
you can usecld-responsive
.
See also: Angular image transformation
Video transformation functionality
In addition to transformation features that are equally relevant for images and video, such as resizing, cropping, rotating, adding text or image overlays, and setting video quality or format, there are a variety of special transformations you can use for video. For example, you can:
- Transcode videos from one format to another
- Apply video effects such as fade-in/out, accelerating or decelerating, adjusting volume, playing in reverse
- Play video-in-video, trim videos, or concatenate multiple videos
- Set video and audio quality options such as bitrate, video codec, audio sampling frequency, or audio codec
- Adjust the visual tone of your video with 3D LUTs
- Generate thumbnails or animated images from video
- Deliver your video using adaptive bitrate streaming in HLS or MPEG-DASH
You can optionally specify all of the above transformations to videos using methods that generate image tags or via direct URL-building directives.
cl-video component
You can specify transformations using the cl-video
component, which automatically generates an HTML5 video tag including the URL sources for the main formats supported by web browsers (webm
, mp4
and ogv
), as well as a poster thumbnail image, which is automatically generated from a frame in the video. This enables the browser to automatically select and play the video format it supports. The video files are created dynamically when first accessed by your users.
As with the cl-image
component, you can optionally include cl-transformation
tags to define chained transformations.
For example:
Will be compiled by Angular to:
version
attribute to the cl-video
component, use [attr.version]="myVersion"
.For more details, see the video tag documentation.
Video attribute directives
Instead of using the <cl-video>
component to generate a complete <video>
tag, you can use the clSrc
and clHref
(or cl-src
and cl-href
for AngularJS) attribute directives to directly transform the given public ID or remote URI to a cloudinary video src
or link href
attribute. This is done the same way for videos and images. For an example, see Image attribute directives.
Video transformation examples
This section provides examples of using Angular code to apply some of the video transformation features mentioned in the previous section.
Example 1:
The following example resizes the dog
video to 40% of it's original size and rotates it by 20 degrees. It also adds a semi-transparent Cloudinary logo in the bottom right corner, using a southeast gravity with adjusted x and y coordinates to reach the corner of the rotated video.
Example 2:
The following example adjusts the brightness of the video, and sets its radius to max in order to give a telescope-like effect. It then appends a copy of the video in reverse, and plays forward again, but in slow motion.
Example 3:
The following example generates a <video>
HTML5 tag for a video whose first 10 seconds will loop continuously in an HTML5 video player with default controls. The video is cropped to 360X480 using the pad cropping method, and it is generated at 70% quality to control file size.
The above statement will be compiled by Angular to:
You can also have a look at a more complex example in the Angular photo-album demo app. This example includes transformations on the poster image and for individual output types.