Now I don’t have to : right-click > english audio and right-click > french subtitle. It launches every video of the season ready to go. It was worth it, right?
Now it’s time to enjoy my day. Oh wait! (it’s 6 am here)
You could have saved hours by just using mkvpropedit writing a simple 3 line bash script that loops through your files.
Just saying 🤷🏼
9 hours and 59 minutes to find the solution, 60 seconds to write the code.
That’s what I already did. And finding the good mkvpropedit command was long.
But here I wanted to automate that and just having to choose the audio and subtitles languages and it executes the mkvpropedit command.
Thanks for sharing your script :) I never thought you would need such a complex (not a programmer so it’s complex for me xD) script. This seems a full automation and looks great ! Well done, it was worth it !
I’m not sure if it’s fixed now but a few years ago Plex ignored the properties and played the first audio stream it found. I had Scooby Doo with Portuguese as the first audio track and although mkvpropedit worked when playing back in VLC, in Plex it would still play Portuguese as default. I had to re merge the streams with English as the first track for Plex to play English by default.
I’m thinking of 2 3 issues here.
Either your file had the propertie flag --forced-display-flag
for the audio track 1 and this would force the audio 1 to play even if you changed the flag-default
with mkvpropedit. In that case you have no other choice to remux your file with mkvmerge and change the flag to --forced-display-flag 1:no
(if it’s the audio track 1) I have no idea why someome would force an audio track…
Or you didn’t used the --edit track:s1
flag with the flag-default
propertie, which uses mkvmerge under the hood. Reading through my notes there is a superuser.com link talking specifically about that, and how it could fuck up your tracks order if you don’t use the track
flag.
Edit: This is only true if your player is capable to select the audio based on the flag default or forced. Otherwise you have to remux the file and change the order of tracks with the --track-order
flag with mkvmerge. This could be the case for Plex, you can probably find that info in the plex documentation !
Edit2: Plex seems to use both but I would suspect plex or bad flags being the culprit here rather than mkvtools.
Share your code? (Or is it like mine, and shameful)
I could but I would have to comment it a little more. If I don’t forget I’ll share it later in response of your message.
Why not share it and then let others comment it? Something like that should work.
I know but I didn’t fell completely at ease to share some mildly clean code. Now it’s good. I put it in the comments.
Here it is. I took the time to comment it well and rearrange some things.
It’s in 2 files :
https://pastebin.com/FQ7xqNSt
https://pastebin.com/6S3qesWc
Keep the file names I chose when copy/pasting. Read the loop file to see how to use it quickly.
I forgot to say in the loop script’s quick explanations that you need mkvmerge and mkvpropedit from MKVToolNix (put it in the PATH variable if needed) and nodejs to make that script work.
Why waste 5 seconds every time to want to watch a video, when you can waste 10 hours writing a script to automate it?
That’s just how we programmers roll
but did you make the script agpl3?
I think you’re talking about the licence and for the moment I didn’t have time to think about what licences I should use and primarly what are the licences existing.
Ok, thanks. I’ll note this. I have to begin to understand this if I want to put some code online more “seriously”.
You didn’t ask ChatGPT to write it for you???