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4th April 2003, 08:41 | #1 | Link |
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How to find out which Title and Title Set is for Widescreen/Fullscreen
How to find out which Title and Title Set is for Widescreen/Fullscreen
Courtesy of 2CL This is a common question asked by newbies when they encounter a DVD containing both widescreen and fullscreen movies. I understand that IFoedit may be difficult to understand initially so I wanted to show you a generic guide on how to find out which Title is for a certain display aspect ratio (DAR) and which Title Set it resides in. The easiest way for you, as a newbie, to find out which is widescreen or fullscreen is to play the DVD in IFOedit. Open any IFO and press DVD-Play to preview the movie. Prior to either version is going to play, you will be presented with your aspect ratio selection menu for you to choose widescreen or fullscreen. Note: There maybe cases in which the aspect ratio menu does not appear and that it plays a certain format as default. You would have your option to change format in a settings menu. Whichever you select, when the movie plays, look in IFOedit’s DVD Play Panel below. There’s a status window. Your Title number will be displaying. Remember it or write it down. Now that you got your Title number, go to your VIDEO_TS.IFO / VMG Overview / Number of Title Play Maps. On the same line of the Title you got in Status Panel, you will have your Title set number following it, e.g. VTS_01_* .
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2COOL Last edited by 2COOL; 4th April 2003 at 23:03. |
6th April 2003, 00:03 | #3 | Link |
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for these two posts I enjoyed most the 2nd signature.
Right on spot Josh.
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regards oddyseus "when u r aiming for the impossible everything else is within reach." Mike ps. respect the forum rules, read, search and only then post. |
6th April 2003, 10:22 | #4 | Link |
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@Josh and oddyseus
There may be many ways to find out the Title number but you still need a program like IFoedit to find out what the Title Set that Title resides in. IMO, while you end up using IFOedit, might as well start with viewing it in IFOedit also. Anyways, I was just providing a working method.
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6th April 2003, 12:57 | #5 | Link |
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2Cool there was no intention of an insult of any kind. We all know your level of experience and I personally keep a copy of your subtitles thread handy next to my computer.
However it was a little complicated approach for a relatively simple problem. Don't u think? Keep up the good work.
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regards oddyseus "when u r aiming for the impossible everything else is within reach." Mike ps. respect the forum rules, read, search and only then post. |
6th April 2003, 13:30 | #6 | Link |
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@oddyseus
No problem and thanks for the compliment! I'm really an easy-going guy. I have been backing up DVDs for quite a while now and my collection grows everyday. I tend to keep track of certain working procedures that I habitually use and keep notes of them in Word. Sometimes, a procedure may seem complicated at first but it gets to be second nature after a doing it many times. I'm a point that I don't even look at my scribbly notes anymore on some hex values for certain commands as I have it committed to memory. So, it's nice for people to help me stay grounded and focused on the simple things. Often, I review some of my guides to see how I can break it down into more simpler methods. I find it amazing I have time to write guides, backup my DVDs, and peruse through the forums.
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20th April 2003, 17:12 | #7 | Link | |
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Re: How to find out which Title and Title Set is for Widescreen/Fullscreen
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28th April 2003, 21:45 | #9 | Link |
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2COOL,
I just came across your extensive "How-To" guides. Nice work, though I haven't really read all of them. When reading VIDEO_TS.IFO in Ifoedit, the Titlesets will already tell whether the movie is Fullscreen (4:3) or Widescreen (16:9) without viewing the VOBs. I guess we have to figure the level of skill of the newbie. Some will be interested in exploring the Titleset info, while others are strictly visual oriented with thte VOBs. still a newbie, PSX Zombie |
29th April 2003, 14:56 | #10 | Link |
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Even if I consider me as a newbie - I bought my DVD tow monthes ago - I'm always interested to have more than one method.
IFOEDIT is a very powerful tool but it's not an esay-to-understand tool ! So astuces like this are always welcome...and easy method useful when I'm not sure I'm understanding the right way. In conclusion : thank you mister 2Cool for "in depth" method, and thank you the others guys for "easy way" methods. David |
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