I’ve been using Clipgrab (macOS) to download music (mp3s) from YouTube. I’ve seen some mentions that the quality (real bitrate as opposed to what the file states) is bad to begin with on YouTube and that downloaders might make it worse. How bad is the quality of what I’m downloading? Any better downloaders or does the quality suck to begin with?

  • Cevilia (she/they/…)
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    31 year ago

    yt-dlp can just download the audio. It usually comes down in m4a at quality that I would describe as “very listenable”. So only the first of those three steps are mandatory if you do it that way.

    yt-dlp -x <url>

    • @twistedtxb@lemmy.ca
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      31 year ago

      But is the source separate on YT’s server is what I’m wondering.

      If not, there’s a transcoding stage

    • 133arc585
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      1 year ago

      From my use of this, it downloads a video and extracts the audio stream from it. In fact, you can see this as it leaves the video file on disk while it’s extracting the audio, and the audio-extraction process uses a decent amount of cpu (takes a few minutes for long concert sets on my raspberry pi). AFAICT, there’s no way to only download the audio without incurring the unnecessary bandwidth and CPU usage.

      Edit: I just checked and the CPU usage seems to be coming from the fact that I am asking yt-dlp to convert the audio format. Now I’m questioning whether it is actually the video that I’ve seen temporarily on disk or just the audio file in the youtube-native format.

      • Cevilia (she/they/…)
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        1 year ago

        It varies based on the age of the video, newer ones do indeed have separate audio downloads. You can force audio only with

        yt-dlp -f bestaudio <url>

        This will cause the script to only consider audio-only formats, if bandwidth is a concern. However, how it decides which one is “best” is beyond me. For example, I tried one video and got a webm that contains only an audio track:

        ~ $ yt-dlp -f bestaudio https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQw4w9WgXcQ
        [youtube] Extracting URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dQw4w9WgXcQ
        [youtube] dQw4w9WgXcQ: Downloading webpage
        [youtube] dQw4w9WgXcQ: Downloading ios player API JSON
        [youtube] dQw4w9WgXcQ: Downloading android player API JSON
        [youtube] dQw4w9WgXcQ: Downloading m3u8 information
        [info] dQw4w9WgXcQ: Downloading 1 format(s): 251
        [download] Destination: /data/data/com.termux/files/home/storage/movies/ytdl/20091025__Rick_Astley_-_Never_Gonna_Give_You_Up_Official_Music_Video.webm
        [download] 100% of    3.28MiB in 00:00:00 at 6.91MiB/s
        
        • 133arc585
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          21 year ago

          Yes, I deleted my comment after I checked the command line I was using and testing it out. The CPU usage was because I was using the --audio-format flag with something other than m4a/opus or whatever it is that youtube uses natively. And the file I saw on disk was not the video, it was the audio file in youtube’s native format.

          For reference, I’m using $ytdl -f "bestaudio/best" -ciw -o "$audioroot/%(title)s (%(upload_date>%Y-%m-%d)s).%(ext)s" --extract-audio --audio-quality 0 --audio-format mp3 "$vidurl".