Windows media centre disable subtitles




















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This thread is locked. You can follow the question or vote as helpful, but you cannot reply to this thread. When LAV Splitter is used for a file, you should see a white icon in your system tray right-bottom corner of your screen. That icon belongs to LAV Splitter. Right-click on the icon to choose between the audio and subtitle streams that are embedded in the file. When Haali Media Splitter is used for a file, you should see a white icon in your system tray right-bottom corner of your screen.

That icon belongs to Haali Media Splitter. When the DirectVobSub subtitle filter is active you should see a green arrow-shaped icon in your system tray right-bottom corner of your screen. Right-click on that icon to select a subtitle. See above on how to select a subtitle in that case. See this FAQ page for detailed instructions. How you can do it depends on with method you are using for displaying the subtitles.

If you do not know which method you are using, then read the other FAQ topics on this page for more information about them. Below you can find the settings for all three methods.

The internal subtitle renderer of MPC works differently from the other subtitle filters. Instead of merging the subtitle image with the video before it gets send to the video renderer, it sends the subtitle image to the video renderer separately from the video. The video renderer is then responsible for merging it with the video.

The disadvantage of this method is that it only works with certain video renderers. The advantage is that the subtitles can be placed anywhere on the visible screen.

There is no need to enlarge the video frame. Positioning them relative to the screen thus allows placing the subtitles in the black bars that you see during full screen playback. It is usually enough to adjust the positioning to be relative to the screen. With these two subtitle display methods, the subtitles are merged on top of the video frame.

Placing the subtitles below the video is only possible by enlarging the video frame. This is done by adding black bars to the top and bottom of the video. These black bars will also be visible when the video is not in fullscreen. They are different from black bars that are only visible during fullscreen playback. Those are not part of the video frame and thus can not be used to put the subtitles onto.

So two steps need to be taken: 1 enlarge the video frame, and 2 move the subtitles down a bit. Step 1 is the most important, step 2 is often not even needed. Below you will find instructions for configuring DirectVobSub and ffdshow. You only need to configure the filter that is responsible for displaying the subtitles.

Usually that will be DirectVobSub, unless you explicitly configured ffdshow to handle the subtitles. Don't make it too big, otherwise the bottom part of the subtitles may fall outside of the visible video area. In old versions of DirectVobSub the option is named differently.

Then it was called "Pre-buffer subpictures" and you need to disable it to get animation. In old versions of Media Player Classic the option was called "Sub-picture buffer". Set that value to 0 to get animation. They are largely based on the same code, so they have similar abilities.

The main difference between the two is how the subtitles are merged with the video. DirectVobSub merges the subtitle image with a video frame before that video frame gets send to the video renderer.

The advantage of this method is that it works with all video renderers. The internal subtitle filter of MPC sends the subtitle image to the video renderer separately from the video. The video renderer is responsible for merging them together.

The advantage of this method is that it is compatible with DXVA video decoders. That are video decoders that use your graphics card to assist in the decoding process. Such decoders need a direct connection to the video renderer, meaning that intermediate filters such as DirectVobSub can not be used. A disadvantage of the internal subtitle filter of MPC is that it only works with certain video renderers.

That way you won't get double subtitles. This is the fault of Windows Media Player. In certain situations it prevents intermediate filters such as DirectVobSub from loading.

An alternative method for displaying the subtitles is to activate the internal subtitle filter in ffdshow. If you always want to use ffdshow for the subtitles, then don't forget to disable DirectVobSub with the Codec Tweak Tool. Otherwise you might get double subtitles in some situations. Make sure you have enabled the DVD subtitles. You can enable the subtitles through the "Navigate" menu in MPC. There you can also select the subtitles language. If no subtitles are displayed, even when you have enabled them, then try the following solutions:.

There are three ways to display subtitles using the components that are available in the codec pack. This subtitle renderer has the advantage that it is compatible with video decoders that use DXVA hardware acceleration. This renderer works differently then DirectVobSub and ffdshow. It does not merge the subtitle image with the video before the video reaches the video renderer, but instead it sends the subtitle images to the video renderer separately from the video and instructs the video renderer merge them with the video.

The above is possible because Media Player Classic has control over the video renderer. The internal subtitle renderer only works with specific video renderers. It gets placed in between the video decoder and the video renderer. I don't know what the laws are where you are, but a dvd ripper like AnyDVD by Slysoft should remove any region restrictions. Joined Jul 12, Messages 0. W1zzard Administrator Staff member.

Joined May 14, Messages 23, 3. W1zzard said:. Joined Jan 18, Messages 24, 4. Is there not an icon on the taskbar that you can right click to disable subtitles? Joined Jul 30, Messages 6, 1. Yea sounds like the subs are part of the movie. Shame, good film. Joined Jan 14, Messages 2, 0. System Specs. WhiteLotus said:. Mr McC said:. I downloaded VLC and the issue repeats: no subtitles in Spanish, but some genius has embedded the subtitles when the original English version is selected.



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