![]() I agree, I have to do a slightly convoluted process at the moment. Now what I wrote above is far from being an elegant solution, but it works seamlessly and uses only free/open software. Also saw some people were joining two srt files together, which is a viable alternative if you have them, but not really if you need a subtitle stream with non-latin complex characters (Japanese in my case), for which OCR is terrible and srt files are not available (only vobsub style bitmaps). PS: I've tried so many alternatives I can't remember, anything from KMPlayer (sometimes works, but it's terrible buggy and full of crapware/adverts), good old BSPlayer (supposed to work but fails to display subtitles in modern mp4 files), etc. ![]() There is an increasing number of multicultural households around the world, and this is a much needed feature. ![]() Now here is still hope that some future version of VLC has native support for multiple subtitles. * Start Key Presser, choose "Subtitler Lite (Mod)" in the application list, Single Key "Enter", Time Interval of choice (I use 100ms), and click "start".Īnd there you go, your video should play showing both subtitles (top and bottom) simultaneously. * Start video play in VLC, choose your primary subtitle (displayed bottom), and click View -> Subtitler Lite (Mod) A Window with a "Refresh" button will appear. * You need the secondary subtitle in srt format (primary subtitle can be embedded in the mkv or mp4 file of choice), name it exactly the same as your video file and put it in the same folder. * Mederi's "Subtitler (lite)" VLC extension ( link) I'm just writing to explain how I solved it, and hopefully it'll help others. And since VLC is cross platform compatible, you can also setup the same playlists the same way on a Windows PC, Android, or linux machine too.Īs mentioned before, you can also create a new playlist in iTunes and play multiple video files that way, but VLC is a better choice for many users because VLC has a very broad range of media file compatibility and is able to play MOV, MKV, AVI, WMV, amongst many other video file formats.I know this is an old thread, but still one of the top results in Google when looking for this problem. While this applies to the Mac, you can accomplish the same sequential video playlist on iPhone and iPad by using VLC for iOS, which also plays a wide variety of video formats and types. You can drag an entire folder of videos or movies into VLC to create a playlist, otherwise choose a collection of movies to play by selecting multiple files on the Mac and dragging those into the media player app. Modify the play order by dragging and dropping the video files shown in the playlist as necessary.Access the playlist by going to the VLC “Window” menu and choosing “Playlist”.The videos will begin playing automatically, in sequential order.Drag and drop those selected video files into the VLC icon, or the VLC application interface that is open in Mac OS. ![]()
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