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This is an experimental tool to help language-learners exploit parallel subtitles in various ways. Among other things, it can generate bilingual subtitles, review pages, and decks of Anki cards:

Fleet of ships on TV, with subtitles in English and Spanish Flash card with image and audio on front, bilingual subtitles on back

Here's the documentation:

Example usage:

```sh

Create a bilingual subtitle file.

substudy combine episode0101.es.srt episode0101.en.srt \

episode0101.bilingual.srt

Export images, audio clips and subtitles as a web page.

substudy export review episode0101.mkv \ episode0101.es.srt episode0101.en.srt ```

Installing substudy

The easiest way to install substudy is using the cargo install command. To get access to this, you'll to install Rust 1.5. If you already have multirust installed, you can run:

sh multirust update stable

If you've never heard of multirust, you can look at the instructions on the Rust install page, or you can just run the following:

sh curl -sSf https://static.rust-lang.org/rustup.sh | sh

You will also need to have a working copies of cmake and the latest version of ffmpeg (2.8.1 or newer), which you might be able to install as follows:

```sh

MacOS X with brew installed.

brew install cmake ffmpeg

Ubuntu.

sudo apt-get install cmake ```

Installing ffmpeg on Ubuntu is a bit more complicated, because you need to get the latest version from a third-party repository. Do not try to replace ffmpeg with older versions of libav; they may eat up a huge amount of memory and then crash.

sh sudo apt-add-repository ppa:mc3man/trusty-media sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install ffmpeg sudo apt-add-repository -r ppa:mc3man/trusty-media sudo apt-get update

Once all that is set up, you can then install substudy by running:

sh cargo install substudy

Building substudy

Assuming you have Rust and the other dependencies installed as described above, you can run:

sh git clone https://github.com/emk/substudy.git cd substudy cargo build

If this fails, please feel free to submit an issue.

Using substudy as a library

You can find API documentation on the Rust CI site. Note that all APIs are experimental and subject to change. If you want to use substudy as a library in your own tools, you're encouraged to do so, but it might be worth letting me know which APIs you're using so that I can stabilize them.

Contributing

Please feel welcome to send me a pull request or submit an issue!

Make sure everything continues to work with your changes:

sh cargo test

Things which I'd love to see substudy support include:

Things which I'll probably merge if they come with clean code and solid test suites:

I'm happy to leave serious, interactive subtitle editing to Subtitle Edit, and to focus on cases related to language learning, and to things which are convenient to call from the command line. I'd also be happy to have implementations of the most useful subs2srs features in command-line form—it's a wonderful and useful program, but it has too many configuration options and it requires too much work using external utilities.

License

This program is released into the public domain using the CC0 public domain declaration. Our test suites contain a half-dozen lines of subtitles from copyrighted TV shows, which should presumably fall under de minimis, fair use or equivalent exceptions in most jurisdictions.