![]() It has a video stream, audio stream, and chapters.Īudio stream is selected, so in the lower half it shows you some properties of the audio, like language.ĭown under 'Output filename' you can choose where to save it. Putting stuff together is easy - you just add all the streams you need and mux. This is where you put MKVs together and where you can do other stuff too. If you want for example subtitles from all files and from one of them audio too, check subtitles on the right, and under the file you want audio from, check both audio and subtitles. Right now, this will extract audio and subtitles from all 6 files. ![]() On the right is a menu for all the files you have loaded. Under each file you have pretty much the same menu as in mkvextract. Several minutes (hopefully seconds, but w/e) later. So instead you'll just use a search engine to locate this thing called mkvcleaver and download that. MKVextract only lets you open one file at a time, so if you want to extract subs from 26 files, it'll bug the hell out of you. That's all nice and stuff, but fuck that. Here you can see the subtitle stream checked (in case you couldn't tell). Open it, load an mkv file and you'll see this:Īs you may guess (unless you're really dumb), you check boxes, click 'Extract,' and it extracts the streams you checked. ![]() MKVextract is for getting things out of MKVs. The 2 files that you'll use are MKVextractGUI.exe and mmg.exe. I know you don't know what you're doing 'cause you're reading a guide that explains how to do what you wanna do. You will see that I'm using 4.4.0, but unlike you, I know what I'm doing. ![]() Yes, 4.1.1, because newer ones have issues and no benefits. This is a simple guide for using MKV tools, as should be apparent from the title.ĭownload MKVtoolnix version 4.1.1, for example ![]()
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