Understanding Subtitles [Dec. 16, 2012, 12:04 p.m.]
- Know what a subtitle is
- Different kinds of subtitles
- Formats subtitles can take
- Write basic subtitles for a video
What are subtitles?
Subtitles are textual versions of the dialog or commentary in films, television programs, video games, and the like, usually displayed at the bottom of the screen. They can be a written translation of the video dialog in a foreign language or a rendering of the dialog in the original language often targeting viewers who are deaf, hard-of-hearing or have accent recognition problems.
Different types of subtitles
1) Burned-in subtitles (or "hard subs")
These are subtitles that are built-in to the image and cannot be removed as they totally become part of the image. Now that they are built-in to the image, there is no way to make them disappear properly, as they're totally part of the image.
2) Soft subtitles
They are hidden within the video file and not built-in to the image thus can be removed temporarily, if not required, using the video player menu. You may find different languages for these soft subtitles (for example up to 8 different languages in the same AVI!) Those soft subtitles will appear in subtitle menu of your player and the viewer can select which ever suits their needs.
3) External subtitles
These are external individual files: most usual are .srt files (which contain only 1 language) or the couple of files .sub + .idx that may contain up to 32 different languages!)
Most often, if you want those external subtitles files to be opened automatically when the video file is opened in a player, then subtitles file should have the same name as the movie file. For example:
Open Video Tutorial.avi <= the movie file
Open Video Tutorial.srt <= the external subtitle file
Playing Video Captions Online
Many video sharing systems allow you to play captions and subtitles on top of your video files. The used of closed captions allow you to choose different language possibilities rather than having only the subtitles of only one language burned into your video. Below we can see a video with English subtitles selected.
The same video shown on the Papuan Voices website has been translated into many languages. These can be selected in the online video player.
The system for displaying and creating subtitles used by the Papuan Voices website is Amara which is hosted on universalsubtitles.org
We can see that this page allows you to download the video file and the subtitle files separately. We will do this in our mission to understand more about how these kinds of subtitles work.
Click on the Download Subtitle link. We will be given the option to open or save a subtitle file of the type .srt.
If we open up the file that we download we will see that it is really pretty simple listing times and the text to be displayed over the video.
About SubRip Files (srt)
SubRip is the most used format for subtitling and it may have the file format .srt
To create your own SubRip subtitling file, we will need a text editor. Open your text editor and save your file with a .srt extension. Note that encoding must be UTF-8 so that special characters can be used
Format:
n
h1:m1:s1,d1 --> h2:m2:s2,d2
Some text to display beneath this scene
n = sequential number. This may also appear on the same line as start/stop times.
h1:m1:s1,d1 = start time of this frame, in hours minutes and seconds to three decimal places.
h2:m2:s2,d2 = stop time. i.e time when this subtitle text should disappear from the screen
Extensions : Some subtitles feature html tags inside the SubRip text:
<b>...</b>: bold
<s>...</s>: strikethrough
<u>...</u>: underline
<i>...</i>: italic
<font color=... face=...>: font attributes
Playing SRT Subtitles Offline with VLC player
Now that we have downloaded our video file and subtitle file we can also download them on our desktop computer.
To do this, open your video file in VLC player. If you subtitle file is in the same directory and called a very similar name to your video file, it may be automactially recoginised and played by VLC. If not then you can select Video >
Creating Subtiles Online
At univeralsubtitles.org you can create subtitles online. The process is quite easy and intuative, and there are step by step instructions on the website.
The work area is shown below.
The workflow has 4 stages.
- Typing
- Syncing
- Edit Title and Description
- Checking Work
Other Ways of Creating SRT Files
SRT files have been widely adopted for this reason. They are simple and they do the job well. There are many tools on the desktop which we can use to create these files. Jubler, Subtitle Workshop, Gnome subtitles or the pan.do/ra tool Speedtrans. This can be handy if we want to subtitle our files off line.
More Info on Different Subtitle Formats
Here is some additional information on other type of subititles.
Textual Subtitles - These are formats which a made up of pure text files. Examples include:
- SubRip
- SubViewer
- SAMI
- MicroDVD
- VPlayer
- Sub Script Alpha
- JacoSub
- MPsub
- USF
- CMML
Picture-based Subtitles- There are also subtitles which are essentially pictures instead of text. These kinds of subtitles are used in DVDs, VCDs and the external VobSub files. Examples include:
- DVD subtitles
- DVB sutitles
- VobSub
- CVD
- OGT and SVCD Subtitle (OGT) Information
File Format/Container Embedding Subtitles: These are file formats to which subtitles can be added to. Examples include:
- MOV
- MP4
- OGM
- Matroska
- AVI
- TS
Assessment Task
Create an SRT file either offline or online.
Use the Amara system to create a player for your video and subtitle file.
Post the link to your online video player with subtitles on the amara website our your own blog / website