Slash Back Subtitles English [CRACKED]
The examples below show places in a sentence where lines can be broken. The ideal places to break are marked by the green slashes, while the orange slashes indicate places where it would be OK to break the line if breaking at the green slashes were not possible. Note that you don't normally break lines that do not exceed 42 characters; the examples below are simply used to show various grammatical contexts where a sentence can be broken, not to suggest that you should break subtitles into very short lines. Every language has different line-breaking rules, but the English examples below can inspire you to search for these rules in your language.
Slash Back subtitles English
Background colour of an inline area generated by a element. This attribute can also be applied to block elements and other colours are supported, but BBC subtitles use black background applied to elements only.
Note that these instructions are for creating a bare-bones file that does not include many of the features required by the BBC. All subtitles will appear in white text on a black background and centred at the bottom of the screen. This minimal formatting excludes features like colour (to identify speakers), positioning (to avoid obscuring important information) and cumulative subtitles. You should therefore check with the commissioning editor that this minimal file is suitable. 041b061a72