Aegisub / Timing

The main audio view

When your audio file has loaded, Aegisub will transform into something like the screenshot below: audio display.png

You can click and drag just below the audio timeline to change the height of the audio waveform/spectrum display.

Green and red buttons are toggle buttons. A green background indicates that the option is turned on, while a red background indicates that the option is turned off. The buttons and controls are as follows (many of these have keyboard shortcuts associated with them by default):

  1. Go to previous line, discarding any unsaved changes (previous syllable when in karaoke mode)
  2. Go to next line, discarding any unsaved changes (next syllable when in karaoke mode)
  3. Play selected area of the audio waveform
  4. Play currently selected line
  5. Pause playback
  6. Play 500ms before selection start
  7. Play 500ms after selection end
  8. Play first 500ms of selection
  9. Play last 500ms of selection
  10. Play from selection start to end of file (or until pause is pressed)
  11. Add lead-in (how much is determined by the audio lead in setting)
  12. Add lead-out (exactly like the above, but the setting is called audio lead out, logically enough)
  13. Commit (save) changes
  14. Scroll view to selection/go to selection
  15. Toggle auto-commit (if enabled, all timing changes are committed instantly rather than waiting for the user to press commit)
  16. Toggle auto next line on commit (if this is enabled, Aegisub will automatically select the next line when the current line is committed by the user. Auto-commits do not trigger this, for obvious reasons)
  17. Toggle auto-scrolling (will center waveform on the currently selected line automatically when enabled)
  18. Toggle spectrum analyzer mode (see below)
  19. Toggle Medusa-style timing shortcuts
  20. Toggle karaoke mode
  21. Audio display zoom (horizontal)
  22. Audio display zoom (vertical)
  23. Audio volume
  24. Toggle linking of vertical audio zoom slider with volume slider

Basic audio timing

When you click on a line in the subtitles grid, Aegisub will highlight it in the audio display and, if you have auto-scrolling enabled, scroll the audio display so it's centered on the line (during normal timing, it's usually a good idea to disable auto-scrolling). You'll notice various vertical lines in the audio display; the pink ones indicate keyframes in the video if you have it loaded (see the Working with video section), the white broken line indicates the currently visible video frame, and the thick red and orange ones are the line start and end markers (respectively) for the current line. To (re-)define the start and end times of the line, you can either left-click to set the start time and right-click to set the end time, or just drag-and-drop the line boundaries. Press the play button (keyboard shortcut s by default) to listen to the selection, or the various other playing buttons to listen to parts of the selection or the audio surrounding it. When you are satisfied with the timing, press commit to save the line and move onto the next one. Then repeat once for every line; it's as simple as that.

Timing protips

If you want to finish timing your movie or episode within any reasonable amount of time, there's some things you should note:

  • Use keyboard shortcuts! They speed up your work by several orders of magnitude.
  • You don't need to have video displayed while timing. If you think you do, there's a good change you're doing something wrong. Scene-timing, i.e. syncing line start/ends to scene changes, can be done later. Either manually, or with the timing postprocessor.
  • Use "go to next line on commit".
  • Experiment with different timing styles when you're new and stick to one that suits you. Then practice. Lots.
  • Aegisub heavily relies on the concept of "focus", and doing things in a way that require you to switch back and forth between video/audio/subtitle edit box a lot will cost you a lot of time. Do it in several "passes" instead.
  • The spectrum analyzer mode looks weird at first, but usually makes it lot easier to "see" where lines start and end, especially when there is background noise.
  • With practice, it's often faster and easier to time something from scratch than fix bad timing, due to that fixing bad timing requires spending a small amount of time thinking about each line.
  • If you want to delete all timing data and start over, a simple way is to use the shift times dialog to shift all lines backwards by 9:59:59.99.

One common timing style (preferred by the author of this page) goes something like the following: Turn on "go to next line on commit" but disable auto-committing, auto-scrolling and Medusa timing shortcuts. Keep the four main fingers of your left hand on s/d/f/g. You won't be using the thumb so do whatever you want with it. Keep your right hand on the mouse. Now select (by left- and right-clicking) an area in the waveform that seems likely to contain a line of speech matching the current subtitle line, and hit s to play it back. While it's playing, adjust the start time if necessary. When the playback marker has passed the end time mark, adjust the end time as well. If greater accuracy is needed, play the last 500ms of the selection by pressing d, 500ms before the selection start by pressing q, 500ms after the selection end by pressing w, or the first 500ms of the selection by pressing e. As you grow more experienced, you won't be using anything else than s very much, except maybe d and q. When you're satisfied with the timing, hit g to commit changes and go on to the next line. Scroll the audio display forward by pressing f. If you need to scroll it backwards, use a. To go to next or previous line without committing changes, use z and x.

This style has the advantage that you never need to move your hands at all. With some training, it can also be very fast; audio timing 350-400 lines of dialog to a 25-minute episode can easily be done in less than 40 minutes, and less verbose scripts can sometimes be done faster than real time.

Of course, this style may not feel comfortable for all people; you should experiment with other timing styles before deciding which one is best for you.

The spectrum analyzer mode

spectrum.png

When you press the spectrum analyzer button, the waveform does no longer show amplitude (signal strength) on the vertical axis - instead it shows frequency. The higher up, the higher the frequency. The colors instead indicate amplitude, with black/dark blue being silence and white being the strongest sound. This may seem confusing, but since the frequency window is set to fit human voices rather well, it can make it easy to tell where a line (or a word in karaoke mode) starts and ends when there's a lot of background noise (or music) that makes it hard to tell from the normal waveform. It can be especially useful when timing karaoke. Play around with it for a little while, and you'll understand how it works.

Note that in spectrum analyzer mode, the "vertical zoom" slider is redefined to control color intensity instead, since the colors indicate signal strength.

Because calculating the spectrum data is very CPU intensive, it in initially set to be in a medium quality. You can increase the quality of the spectrum in the audio options. This is mostly important when you built Aegisub yourself and did not use FFTW3; FFTW3 is fast enough that the default quality is bumped up a bit.

Karaoke timing

**Todo:** here be dragons