
- WHY DOES MKV FOR MAC SHOW DIFFERENT TITLES THAN FOR WINDOWS SERIES
- WHY DOES MKV FOR MAC SHOW DIFFERENT TITLES THAN FOR WINDOWS DOWNLOAD
Take a look at Lehmden's Video2MKV tool for this task. This should be done manually to select audio stream languages and other properties or merge splitted video files into one MKV, etc.
I won't include a feature to mux non-MKV files into MKV-files. Missing ones can be added manually in the preview window of the new tag file.īefore requesting a change or feature you should know that: New ones will be added from time to time. The are still a lot of tags unused and not implemented, yet. The tool is still work in progress and it's GUI is not beautified, yet. WHY DOES MKV FOR MAC SHOW DIFFERENT TITLES THAN FOR WINDOWS DOWNLOAD
The download of the tool is attached to this post.
reading existing xml tags from MKV filesīy executing the previously mentioned tools mkvextract.exe and mkvpropedit.exe and creating well-formed xml files containing your metadata, which you defined in the MatroskaTagger user interface. Writing xml tags back to Matroska files can be done by mkvpropedit.exe without the need to remux a file. Notepad (better Notepad++) for modifying the xml file. Extracting (reading) xml tags from Matroska files can be done by mkvextract.exe, which is included in the MkvToolnix. The following tools can be used to edit Matroska tags manually: After the xml has been embedded within the *.mkv file, you can not change it directly. While having these xml files as tag file format, it is very flexible and extensible (You can include in your video files almost any metadata you want to), creating/editing those files is not very comfortable. įor muxing (converting) *.avi, *.mpg, *.flv, *.mp4 files and many other into Matroska I recommend the MkvToolnix. Information about Matroska tagging can be found at. It is also possible to tag *.mp4 or *.m4v files, but this is also not topic of this thread.įor general information about the Matroska container, please take a look at their official homepage & wikipedia. Tagging Matroska audio files *.mka is also possible, but not topic of this thread nor of this tool. I am mainly talking about Matroska files here: *.mkv & *.mk3d
you did not know that you are able to store a huge amount of metadata within your video files.
If you decide to change filenames, you need to make sure the definition is still be able to detect the information.
you use a defined file/folder structure, which works in most cases. WHY DOES MKV FOR MAC SHOW DIFFERENT TITLES THAN FOR WINDOWS SERIES
But do you create *.nfo files for all your series / episodes? fine, good way to make sure the file is being identified correctly.
you use *.nfo files containing an IMDB-id for movies. Why don't you put metadata like a movie's IMDB-id, or an episode's series name, season index and episode index in the tags of your video files? ?īecause you might want to have more metadata embedded to be identified correctly by different media players?
Mp3tag? MusicBrainz Picard? MPTagThat? foobar? others, multiple ones. Which tagger do you use for modifying the tags of your music files (MP3 ID3.