Text files called SRT files have subtitles in them. They are utilised by numerous video playback applications, including CyberLink PowerDVD and Microsoft Media Player. The textual portion of the subtitle is followed by information about when it should appear in the video in the accompanying files. SRT files frequently have language-specific names that include letters like “eng” for English or “es” for Spanish to indicate the language of the subtitles.
SRT files only include data related to a video’s subtitles. They don’t have any video data in them. Lines of text are broken up into groups by blank lines to make up the content of SRT files. A common structure for such a subtitle group might resemble the following: 1 00:00:05,500 –> 00:00:10,000 I tried to explain to her that. Using the appropriate html tags for bold, italic, underlined, and different coloured text, the text can also be formatted.
list of programs that can open SRT file
- MPlayer
- CyberLink PowerDirector 14 Ultra
- CyberLink PowerDVD 15
- Microsoft Windows Media Player with VobSub plugin
- VideoLAN VLC media player
- Media Player Classic
- Aegisub
- Jubler
- olimsoft OPlayer