This Is How You Can Add External Subtitles On Windows Media Player

Author Topic: This Is How You Can Add External Subtitles On Windows Media Player  (Read 1810 times)

Offline arman.ahmed

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Preparation

First thing’s first: download and install Windows Media Player 12. Every machine running Windows 7, Windows 8, or Windows 8.1 should have WMP preloaded. Just search for the program and install it.

Next, get your movie file and your subtitles file. Many websites offer subtitles, but SubtitleHub, the search engine for subtitle websites, will help you quickly search through several of them. Just download the files and extract them if they come in a .zip format.



For this example, I have an episode of Friends and some subtitles that I’ve put in one folder called “Subtitled Friends”.


The Simple Way

Now, just put both of the files in the same folder and make sure they have the same name (aside from the extension). In this case, the video is “Friends” and the subtitle file is “Friends.srt”.



Right-click on the video and choose “Play with Windows Media Player”. Hopefully, your video now plays with subtitles. But if it still isn’t working, you have a few more options.



If You Run Into Trouble

The first step is to make sure WMP is set to display captions. From the default home screen you can right click on the bar near the top and select Play > Lyrics, captions, and subtitles > On if available. From the window in which the video is playing, this can be reached by right clicking at the top and selecting Lyrics, captions, and subtitles > On if available.



If they still aren’t displaying, you’ll need to download DirectVobSub (http://www.codecs.com/directvobsub_download.htm). The newest version is 2.41.7259 and it has x32 and x64 versions depending on if you have 64 bit or 32 bit Windows.

Simply run the installer, and DirectVobSub is ready to go. If you still can’t see any subtitles, however, there is one last thing you can try. Rename the subtitle file and change the “.srt” to a “.sub”. For me, the subtitles played regardless of whether it was called .srt or .sub, but some users report one working more often than the other.



Celebrate

Congratulations! You can now watch your TV shows and movies with subtitles on WMP. Be sure to use this power for good, and never for evil.



Reference: http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/this-is-how-you-can-add-external-subtitles-on-windows-media-player/

Arman Ahmed
IT Officer
DIU