SubtitlesEmbedded subtitlesSome file types like Ogg or Matroska can have subtitles in them along with
audio and video. Often they have several internal subtitles, usually in
different languages. DVD video disks also often come with
subtitles on them. &kplayer; finds any of those subtitles and lists them on
the Subtitles
submenu of the Player menu. If the languages of the
subtitles are known, the entries on the submenu are labelled with the language
names.Selecting a subtitle track from the submenu displays the subtitles in the
video area. The
None option disables subtitle display for the current
file, title, track or stream. &kplayer; remembers the subtitle selection and
displays the same subtitles the next time you play the file. The Subtitles section of
the File Properties is another place where you can see and
select the subtitle track to be displayed when playing a video.External subtitlesTo load subtitles from a separate file or files, choose
FileLoad Subtitles.... &kplayer; will display subtitles from the first of the loaded
files in the video area if the video is
playing or the next time you play it. You can also drag and drop subtitle files
from &konqueror; File Manager and drop them anywhere in &kplayer; except the
multimedia library to load and display them.The Subtitles
submenu of the Player menu shows the name of the
loaded external subtitle file along with any internal subtitle tracks and the
None option as described above. You can freely switch
between all the available subtitles. &kplayer; will display the ones you choose
without any interruption in video and audio playback. It will also remember your
choice and load the subtitles again the next time you play the same file or
URL.The Subtitles
section of the File Properties also shows and lets
you change the external subtitle path. In some cases you may also need to tell
&kplayer; if they are VobSub or normal subtitles. This happens when you choose
the .sub file when loading VobSub subtitles. Pointing
&kplayer; to the .idx or .ifo file
should allow it to display the VobSub subtitles correctly without the need to
specify the external subtitle type explicitly.AutoloadingYou can also let &kplayer; load subtitles automatically by placing them
in the same directory as the movie and giving them the same name as the movie
and the correct subtitle extension. For example, if you play a file called
Carandiru.avi, and you have
srt subtitles for it, you can name the subtitle file
Carandiru.srt,
Carandiru.SRT,
Carandiru.avi.srt or
Carandiru.avi.SRT.&kplayer; will autoload subtitle types you choose on the
Subtitles page in &kplayer;
Settings. Autoloading only works for local files, and &kplayer; will
not remember autoloaded subtitles, rather it will autoload them every
time.Subtitle settingsThe Subtitles
section of the &kplayer; Settings dialog allows you
to customize the way subtitles are displayed in the
video area. You can select the font
face, bold and italic style, text size and autoscaling, font outline and text
width.There is also an option to add black areas below and above the video and
show the subtitles in them. That only works when the video aspect ratio is
greater than the one you choose. Normally you should choose the aspect ratio to
match your monitor, which is 4:3 for a regular monitor or
16:9 for a wide one.Another important option is the subtitle encoding. You may need to select
it if &mplayer; does not display your subtitles correctly. If most of your
subtitle files have the same encoding, you can select it in &kplayer; Settings.
But if some of them have different encoding, go to the Subtitles section of
the File Properties and select the encoding there. If the
framerate of the subtitles is different from the framerate of the video, you can
specify the subtitle framerate in the
File Properties
as well.The vertical position of the subtitles and their delay relative to video
can be changed using commands on the
Subtitles
submenu of the Player menu. As usual, using keyboard
shortcuts is recommended. By default &kplayer; will remember the subtitle delay
for each file or URL, and will keep the vertical position
across files. This can be changed on the
Controls page in &kplayer;
Settings.Finding subtitlesThere are a few good places for finding subtitles on the Net, among them
Titles.box.sk,
OpenSubtitles.org and
DivXSubtitles.net.
Make sure to enable popup blocking before going to those sites though.