lankan_man
September 17th, 2005, 13:53 PM
I got this japanese movie that is supposed 2 have subtitles, but how do I eneble th subtitles, the media player i'm using is VLC, If you suggest any other player then tell me, but i'd really like to know how to eneble the subtitles.
tarun
September 17th, 2005, 19:05 PM
Link (http://www.videolan.org/doc/play-howto/en/ch03.html)
Using subtitles
VLC supports many kinds of subtitles.
Media with included subtitles
Many types of media can have embedded subtitles. VLC can read subtitles for the following media:
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DVD
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SVCD
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OGM files
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Matroska (MKV) files
Subtitles are disabled by default. To enable them, go to the Video menu, and to Subtitles track. All available subtitles tracks will be listed. Select one to get the subtitles. Depending on the media, a description (language, for example) might be available for the track.
[D]
Select a subtitles track under Windows or Linux
[D]
Select a subtitles track under MacOS X
DVD and SVCD subtitles are merely images, so you won't be able to change anything for them. OGM and Matroska subtitles are rendered text, so you will be able to change several options.
Text rendering options can be changed in the Preferences. In the Modules section, text renderer subsection, open the freetype page. You can then set the font and its size. For the font, you have to select a font file. Under Windows, they can be found in C:\Windows\Fonts. Under MacOS X, they are in /System/Library/Fonts. Size can be set either relatively or as a number of pixels.
You need to restart your stream for the font modifications to take effect.
Subtitles files
While modern file formats like Matroska or OGM can handle subtitles directly, older formats like AVI can't. Therefore, a number of subtitles files formats have been created. You need two files: the video file and the subtitles files that only contains the text of the subtitles and timestamps.
VLC can handle these types of subtitles files:
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MicroDVD
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SubRIP
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SubViewer
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SSA
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Sami
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Vobsub (this one is quite special: it is not made from text but from images, which means that you can't change the fonts)
To open a subtitles file, use the Advanced Open dialog box (Menu File, Open file). Select your file by clicking on the Browse button. Then, check the Subtitle options checkbox and click on the Settings button.
[D]
Select a subtitles file under Windows or Linux
You can then select the subtitles file by clicking the Browse button. You can also set a few options like character encoding, alignment and size. The delay option allows you to delay the subtitles against the video if they are not in sync. If they are not at the same speed, you might also want to adjust the subtitles framerate.
Note
For Vobsub subtitles, you need to select the .idx file, not the .sub file
Encoding, alignment and size won't have any effect for Vobsub subtitles.
lankan_man
September 17th, 2005, 19:46 PM
thx for that info, but i dont have that file, better find it, but thx alot tarun for that useful info
lankan_man
September 17th, 2005, 20:29 PM
okay, I found the subtitles now :D, and I used the way u told me and it works perfectly, thx alot :D