Then go through each section putting whatever you need into your own script. I suggest you look at the sample scripts at the bottom of the page to get an idea of what a final script looks like. Yes, AviSynth can be confusing and hard to learn, but it is very rewarding once you get the hang of it. The advantages are that you don't have go through as many menus, you don't have to remember which frames you want to cut out, you have access to more advanced deinterlacing filters like mvbob, and you can keep your scripts forever so that you don't have to start from scratch in case you want to re-encode them later. You save the avs file, and load that into MeGUI or VirtualDub for final compression. With AviSynth you're creating a text-based file (.avs) to tell it what to do with text commands. You did all that by moving your mouse, going through menus, etc. Resizing has made the picture blurry, so you add the sharpen filter.You go to the filters section and use resize.You use the brackets to cut off frames you don't need.You go through the menu or drag and drop your source video inside the program.The most important thing to learn right now is the concept of AviSynth. To put it briefly, AviSynth is a video editor like VirtualDub except everything is done with scripts. All beginners are recommended to use Anri-chan instead.
IMPORTANT NOTE: AviSynth scripting is an advanced topic.
3.5.4.2 F1 - Full framerate - low resolution.3.5.4.1 F1 - Full framerate - high resolution.3.5.3 Determining the resolution of the game.3.5.2 Determining the framerate of the game.
3.5 Part 5: Deinterlacing / Full framerate video.