Interfaces
Interfaces are the way you tell VLC what to do. VLC has 2 main Interfaces:
- The wxWidgets Interface (wx) is the default interface on Linux and Windows.
- The skins2 Interface is an interface where you can choose how VLC player looks (Works on Linux and Windows).
- The Mac OS X Interface is the default (and only) graphical interface on Mac OS X.
- The BeOS Interface is the default (and only) graphical interface on BeOS.
The full list of interfaces is
wx | Default wxWidgets interface on Linux and Windows |
skins2 | Load VLC with a skin. (Linux and Windows only) |
macosx | Default Mac OS X interface |
beos | Default BeOS interface |
http | Web Interface, used for controlling VLC from over a network |
gestures | Mouse Gestures, where you can control vlc by moving the mouse |
rc, ncurses, telnet and rtci | Console Interfaces, a non-graphical interface. |
showintf | Show Intefaces module |
hotkeys andjoystick | Control VLC with the keyboard/joystick |
dummy | Don't use an interface |
There are some other interfaces, you can view the list by running VLC with the -l option:
vlc -l
This also displays the muxers and encoders/decoders. On linux, run
vlc -l | grep -i interface
to display the interfaces.
To run VLC with a different primary interface, use the following command:
vlc --intf name
You can also use
vlc -I name
You can also change the default in the Preferences.
However you can also launch more than one interface:
vlc --intf wx --extraintf sap,telnet,http
This will launch VLC with the default wxWidgets interface, but will also launch the sap, telnet and web interface in addition to the wxWidgets one. The default for this can also be changed in the Preferences.
Note that if you only use the dummy interface, you won't be able to tell vlc to quit - you may have to break it manually with Ctrl+C; or use vlc:quit as the last item on the playlist.