with three inputs (-i flag) -- a video file, and two audio files.
The streams are explicitly mapped into the result, counting the inputs from 0 -- i.e. -map 0:v maps input 0 (the first file) as video (v) to the output file and -map 1:a maps the next input as audio (a), etc.
It sets the metadata for the audio tracks -metadata:s:a:0 language=jpn sets the first audio track (again counting from 0...) to Japanese; the second metadata option sets the next audio track to English.
-c:v copy specifies that the video codec should be copied directly (i.e. don't re-encode -- remove this if you DO need to re-encode)
-c:a copy specifies that the audio codec should be copied directly (i.e. don't re-encode -- remove this if you DO need to re-encode)
output.mp4 -- finally, list the name of the file you want the result written into.
Not rendering. Muxing, which is short for multiplexing. Lots of software can do this, including MKVToolNix, ffmpeg, and GPAC/MP4Box. If you're also encoding the video, Handbrake could do the job.
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How to render videos with multiple audio tracks with 2 languages (select between tracks)? | Spyke
I don't know how to do it with KDE's tools, but on the command line with ffmpeg you can do something like this:
Breaking it down, it:
ffmpeg-iflag) -- a video file, and two audio files.-map 0:vmaps input 0 (the first file) as video (v) to the output file and-map 1:amaps the next input as audio (a), etc.-metadata:s:a:0 language=jpnsets the first audio track (again counting from 0...) to Japanese; the second metadata option sets the next audio track to English.-c:v copyspecifies that the video codec should be copied directly (i.e. don't re-encode -- remove this if you DO need to re-encode)-c:a copyspecifies that the audio codec should be copied directly (i.e. don't re-encode -- remove this if you DO need to re-encode)output.mp4-- finally, list the name of the file you want the result written into.See documentation here: https://ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg.html
If you need another language in the future, I think the language abbreviations are the three letter codes from here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ISO_639-2_codes -- but I'm not certain on that.
Not rendering. Muxing, which is short for multiplexing. Lots of software can do this, including MKVToolNix, ffmpeg, and GPAC/MP4Box. If you're also encoding the video, Handbrake could do the job.