WebVTT: Difference between revisions
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Introduction | Introduction | ||
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<c vIntro>Wikipedia is a great adventure. It may have | <c.vIntro>Wikipedia is a great adventure. It may have | ||
its shortcomings, but it is the largest collective | its shortcomings, but it is the largest collective | ||
knowledge construction endevour</c> | knowledge construction endevour</c> |
Latest revision as of 08:25, 28 March 2018
Introduction
“The WebVTT format (Web Video Text Tracks) is a format intended for marking up external text track resources. The main use for WebVTT files is captioning video content.” (WebVTT, retr. April 23 2012). A WebVTT includes a list of so-called cues that can be used by a player to overlay information on the video (e.g. texts or graphics) and for navigation.
WebVTT can be used in the track element of HTML5 video. One can associate different track files with a single video, e.g. multiple language files or multiple formats or various types. As of April 2012, browsers either do not yet implement this or only partially (like Chrome), but some JavaScript-based HTML5 players do implement various subsets of either WebVTT or competing standards such as the simple SRT format.
See also:
- Timed Text (TT or TTML) is an older competing XML-based format that we actually prefer.
- HTML5 audio and video
Do not trust details. Need to test this first - Daniel K. Schneider 19:25, 23 April 2012 (CEST)
The format
The WebVTT format is a fairly complex plain text format. It surprisingly doesn't use XML. However, its data part (the cue contents) can include some XML-like markup.
File structure
A WebVTT file has the following structure:
- First line must be the word "WEBVTT"
- Second line must be empty
- Any number of entries, i.e. so-called cues, separated by at least a blank line
In addition:
- You must use UTF-8 character encoding
- Files must be served as text/vtt, e.g. add the following instruction to an Apache server http.conf or .htacess file
AddType text/vtt .vtt
- Line returns can use Windows or Unix like characters, e.g. \r, \n or \r\n. This basically means that if you see a new line in a text editor, then you are doing fine.
- The &, < and > must be replaced by &, < and >
Simple example
This works with Chrome 18, but you will have to enable track using the chrome://flags URI. Search for track, the click to activate. Track file:
WEBVTT
Introduction
00:00:01.000 --> 00:01:10.000
Wikipedia is a great adventure. It may have
its shortcomings, but it is the largest collective
knowledge construction endevour
Disclaimer
00:01:10.000 --> 00:02:10.000
This is just a track demo using VTT
As you can see, there is a "WEBVTT" header and cues are separated by blank lines. We will explain the cue syntax below.
HTML5 portion (read the HTML5 audio and video article for details):
<video id="movie1" controls preload="metadata">
<source src="videos/state-of-wikipedia-480x272.mp4"/>
<source src="videos/state-of-wikipedia-480x272.ogv"/>
<source src="videos/state-of-wikipedia-480x272.webm"/>
<track kind="subtitles" label="EN subtitles" src="subtitles_en.vtt" srclang="en" default/>
<track kind="subtitles" label="Soustitre en FR" src="subtitles_fr.vtt" srclang="fr"/>
Your browser doesn't support HTML5. Maybe you should upgrade.
</video>
Live example files:
- http://tecfa.unige.ch/guides/html/html5-video/html5-video-track.html
- http://tecfa.unige.ch/guides/html/html5-video/subtitles_en.vtt
Simple cues
Cues roughly have the following structure:
- (1) A header, e.g. a number
- A header cannot include the following strings
"-->"
,\r
,\n
, and\r\n
- (2) A line for timing plus optional layout instructions, i.e. so-called cue settings
- start_time --> end_time [cue settings]
- using the hh:mm:ss.mmm or the shorter mm:ss.mmm format. Note the colons ":" and the dot "."
- optionally followed by layout clues.
- Examples of timing lines
00.00.01.000 --> 00.01.01.017 00.01.000 --> 01.01.017 00.00.01.000 --> 00.01.01.017 T:50%
- (3) One or more lines of text
- The text to be displayed. This text can include some HTML-like markup
- Voice: <v voice name> allows to define a voice (name of the person who speaks)
- CSS class: <c.classname>Some text ...</c> This allows for flexible styling. CSS is defined in the HTML
- Bold: <b>Some text ...</b>
- Italic: <i>Some text ...</i>
- Underline: <u>Some text ...</u>
- Ruby annotations: <ruby>base text<rt>annotation</rt></ruby>
- (4) A separator line
Example simple
The following simple example demonstrates the use of header, timing line and a single text line.
WEBVTT
1
00:00:01.000 --> 00:00:20.000
<v DKS>This is a <b>very short</b> video that is not about WEBVTT
2
00:00:21.000 --> 00:00:40.000
You see a typical example
of a robot moving forward
More cue settings
On the timing line one can define position, alignment and size.
Line position
- line:10 ... means 10 lines down
- line:50% .... means 50% down
Horizontal position
- position:0% ... means left
- position:80% ... means far to the right
Horizontal alignment
- align:start ... means left-aligned
- align:middle ... centered
- align:end ... right aligned
Text width
- size:50% ... means taking up 50% of the video width
Vertical text
- vertical:rl ... grows to the left
- vertical:lr ... grows to the right
Example
WEBVTT
1
00:00.000 --> 01:00.000 vertical:rl
Pile of characters
2
00:01.000 --> 00:02.000 S:50%
Bon soir !
Karaoke style cues
You also can use karaoke style cues, i.e. (if we understood right), text that scrolls up.
source: HTML5 doctor)
WEBVTT
1
00:00:01.000 --> 00:00:10.000
Never gonna give you up <00:00:01.000>
Never gonna let you down <00:00:05.000>
Never gonna run around and desert you
Multiple line cues
You can use HTML p
tags.
WEBVTT
Introduction
00:00:10.000 --> 00:01:10.000
<p>Wikipedia is a great adventure</p>
<p>It may have shortcomings, but it remains the largest collective knowledge construction endevour</p>
Disclaimer
00:01:10.000 --> 00:02:10.000
<p>This is just a track demo using VTT</p>
JSON cues
If we understood right, anything can go into the content lines of a cue, provided that some interpreter can read it. The following shows a JSON data structure that could be interpreted by some HTML5 player.
WEBVTT
Wikipedia
00:01:15.200 --> 00:02:18.800
{
"title": "State of Wikipedia",
"description": "Jimmy Wales talking ...",
"src": "http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/8/80/Wikipedia-logo-v2.svg/120px-Wikipedia-logo-v2.svg.png",
"href": "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia"
}
Adding CSS
When you succeeded to add your subtitles, you might wish to personalise them a little bit with CSS.
Here it is the solution and the way to do it. See the VTT file below. Read carrefully. You'll see the code <c ...></c>
WEBVTT
Introduction
00:00:01.000 --> 00:01:10.000
<c.vIntro>Wikipedia is a great adventure. It may have
its shortcomings, but it is the largest collective
knowledge construction endevour</c>
Disclaimer
00:01:10.000 --> 00:02:10.000
This is just a track demo using VTT
Now, in your css file (that belong to your webpage of course), just add this :
.vIntro {
color: coral;
text-transform: uppercase;
font-family: "Helvetica Neue";
font-weight: lighter;
font-size: 18px;
text-decoration: underline;
}
Now you are able to use CSS for your VTT files.
Software
Browser support
As of April 2012:
- Chrome 18 supports a subset of WebVTT, but you will have to enable it.
- In the Chrome browser, enter the configuration URI:
chrome://flags
- Activate track support (search for "track" in the page) and click.
- Recent Internet Explorer 10 (beta) supports both WebVTT and Timed Text.
- Read Video: timed text tracks (sometimes, these guys are ahead ...)
If your browser doesn't support VTT, some HTML5 video players do provide support. See HTML5 audio and video for some more information about these. There exist probably over a dozen good players. Below we show a live example using such a player.
Validators
- WebVTT validator (copy/paste)
Editing tools
- HTML5 Video Caption Maker Microsoft, should work in any modern browser.
Examples
Simple example 1 (taken from the draft specification)
WEBVTT
00:11.000 --> 00:13.000
<v Roger Bingham>We are in New York City
00:13.000 --> 00:16.000
<v Roger Bingham>We're actually at the Lucern Hotel, just down the street
Simple live example using the LeanBack Player
<div class="leanback-player-video">
<video controls="controls" preload="metadata" poster="wikipedialogo.png" width="480" height="272">
<source src="videos/state-of-wikipedia-480x272.mp4" type='video/mp4; codecs="avc1.42E01E, mp4a.40.2"' />
<source src="videos/state-of-wikipedia-480x272.webm" type='video/webm; codecs="vp8, vorbis"' />
<source src="videos/state-of-wikipedia-480x272.ogv" type='video/ogg; codecs="theora, vorbis"' />
<track enabled="true" kind="subtitles" label="EN"
src="subtitles_en.srt" srclang="en" type="text/x-srt"/>
<track enabled="true" kind="subtitles" label="EN VTT"
src="subtitles_en.vtt" srclang="en" type="text/vtt"/>
<track enabled="true" kind="subtitles" label="FR"
src="subtitles_fr.vtt" srclang="fr" type="text/vtt"/>
<object class="leanback-player-flash-fallback" width="640" height="360"
type="application/x-shockwave-flash"
data="http://releases.flowplayer.org/swf/flowplayer.swf">
<param name="movie" value="http://releases.flowplayer.org/swf/flowplayer.swf" />
<param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" />
<param name="wmode" value="opaque" />
<param name="bgcolor" value="#000000" />
<param name="flashVars"
value="config={'playlist':['wikipedialogo.png',
{'url':'videos/state-of-wikipedia-480x272.mp4','autoPlay':false,'autobuffering':false}]}" />
</object>
<div class="leanback-player-html-fallback" style="width: 640px; height: 360px;">
<img src="wikipedialogo.png" width="640" height="360" alt="Poster Image"
title="No HTML5-Video playback capabilities found. Please download the video(s) below." />
<div>
<strong>Download Video:</strong>
<a href="videos/state-of-wikipedia-480x272.mp4">.mp4</a>
<a href="videos/state-of-wikipedia-480x272.webm">.webm</a>
<a href="videos/state-of-wikipedia-480x272.ogv">.ogv</a>
</div>
</div>
</div>
Live example file:
Track files:
- http://tecfa.unige.ch/guides/html/html5-video/subtitles_en.vtt
- http://tecfa.unige.ch/guides/html/html5-video/subtitles_en.srt
- http://tecfa.unige.ch/guides/html/html5-video/subtitles_fr.vtt
As you can see this player relies on extra markup:
- A wrapping div of class="leanback-player-video"
- Two extra (illegal but harmless) track attributes: enabled="true" and type="....". However we did not test what happens if these are omitted. Maybe the enabled is not needed since this can be configured in the JavaScript and the type only may be needed for local testing.
Links
- Specification
- WebVTT, Draft Community Group Report, 18 October 2016 (retrieved oct 2016)
- Organizations
- Introductions
- Video Subtitling and WebVTT, November 29th, 2011 by Tom Leadbetter.
- Getting started with the HTML5 track element, by Sam Dutton, Feb. 8, 2012
- Understanding WebVTT file format (draft), Julien Villetorte, 2011, 20 May
- Discussion
- WebVTT format - Web Video Text Tracks format (LeanbackPlayer, 2011)
- Recent developments around WebVTT by Sylvia, June 2011.
- General timed track
- Timed track formats (WhatWG wiki)
- http://wiki.whatwg.org/wiki/Timed_tracks Timed tracks (WhatWG wiki)
- Other Tools
- Amara: an easy way to caption and translate any video in this large and powerful platform who is called UniversalSubtitles.org. More info in this video.