Mercurial > mplayer.hg
changeset 12343:24022c32dbc8
don't even mention avifile, 14 subtitles
author | alex |
---|---|
date | Thu, 29 Apr 2004 06:48:04 +0000 |
parents | da1292848fd3 |
children | 638d36c7e3cc |
files | DOCS/xml/en/documentation.xml |
diffstat | 1 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-) [+] |
line wrap: on
line diff
--- a/DOCS/xml/en/documentation.xml Thu Apr 29 06:27:30 2004 +0000 +++ b/DOCS/xml/en/documentation.xml Thu Apr 29 06:48:04 2004 +0000 @@ -61,8 +61,8 @@ QT/MOV/MP4, FLI, RM, NuppelVideo, yuv4mpeg, FILM, RoQ, PVA, Matroska files, supported by many native, XAnim, RealPlayer, and Win32 DLL codecs. You can watch <emphasis role="bold">VideoCD, SVCD, DVD, 3ivx, RealMedia, Sorenson, Theora</emphasis>, and -<emphasis role="bold">DivX</emphasis> movies too (and you don't need the avifile -library at all!). Another big feature of mplayer is the wide range of +<emphasis role="bold">DivX</emphasis> movies too. Another big feature of +<application>MPlayer</application> is the wide range of supported output drivers. It works with X11, Xv, DGA, OpenGL, SVGAlib, fbdev, AAlib, libcaca, DirectFB, but you can use GGI and SDL (and this way all their drivers) and some lowlevel card-specific drivers (for Matrox, 3Dfx and @@ -71,7 +71,7 @@ <application>MPlayer</application> supports displaying through some hardware MPEG decoder boards, such as the <link linkend="dvb">DVB</link> and <link linkend="dxr3">DXR3/Hollywood+</link>. And what about the nice big -antialiased shaded subtitles (<emphasis role="bold">10 supported types</emphasis>) +antialiased shaded subtitles (<emphasis role="bold">14 supported types</emphasis>) with European/ISO 8859-1,2 (Hungarian, English, Czech, etc), Cyrillic, Korean fonts, and the onscreen display (OSD)? </para>