<divclass="box-info">Traducerea acestei pagini nu este completă încă. Până când va fi, părțile incomplete utilizează originalul în limba engleză.</div>
<p>MediaPlayer is the default player for all audio and video files. Thanks to it's <ahref="http://www.ffmpeg.org/">ffmpeg</a> backend, a plethora of widely used formats are supported. Its simple interface has all the controls you'd expect:</p>
<p>The slider of the progress bar allows you to quickly skim to a position, resting the mouse over it shows the current and remaining time of the clip. Clicking on the time display to the right of it, toggles between length, current and remaining time.<br/>
Below that you find the usual controls to skip to the previous track, play/pause, stop and jump to the next track. Then comes a volume control (clicking the speaker symbol toggles muting) and a VU meter.</p>
<h2>Redare audio și video</h2>
<p>Since there aren't any specific features for for audio playback, we'll go straight to video or general features.</p>
<p>Available to all media is the <spanclass="menu">File info...</span> (<spanclass="key">ALT</span><spanclass="key">I</span>). It shows information about the currently loaded file, like playing time or details of the audio/video track and its codec.</p>
<p>Most of the often used commands from the menus are also available from a right-click context menu on the video area. Convenient when in full-screen mode.<br/>
Under <spanclass="menu">Video</span> you'll find options to zoom the window to various levels or force the aspect ratio to some standard values. Leaving the aspect ration to the default <spanclass="menu">Stream settings</span> should work best for correctly encoded files.</p>
<p>MediaPlayer supports subtitles in <ahref="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SubRip">SRT</a> format. To have them show up under <spanclass="menu">Subtitles</span>, their filenames have to be identical to their video file, with a suffixed language name and ".srt" instead of the video's extension. For example:</p>
<pre>MyMovie.avi
MyMovie.Deutsch.srt
MyMovie.English.srt
MyMovie.Français.srt</pre>
<p>Multiple audio tracks, most often used for several languages inside one video file, are available from the <spanclass="menu">Audio track</span> submenu. The <spanclass="menu">Video | Track</span> submenu offers the same when having multiple video streams available.</p>
<p>You can toggle the <spanclass="menu">Full screen</span> mode (<spanclass="key">ALT</span><spanclass="key">ENTER</span> or <spanclass="key">F</span> or a double left-click), hide MediaPlayer's window borders and controls with <spanclass="menu">Hide interface</span> (<spanclass="key">ALT</span><spanclass="key">H</span> or a double right-click) or have it's window <spanclass="menu">Always on top</span> (<spanclass="key">ALT</span><spanclass="key">A</span>).</p>
<h2>Listă de redare</h2>
<p><spanclass="menu">MediaPlayer | Playlist...</span> (<spanclass="key">ALT</span><spanclass="key">P</span>) opens a window with the files currently queued up for playback. Double-clicking an entry starts playing it.</p>
<p>You can add more files by dropping them into the list and rearrange their position via drag & drop. From the <spanclass="menu">Edit</span> menu you can <spanclass="menu">Randomize</span> or <spanclass="menu">Remove</span> (<spanclass="key">DEL</span>) an entry from the list or delete the actual file with <spanclass="menu">Move to Trash</span> (<spanclass="key">ALT</span><spanclass="key">T</span>).</p>
<p>Of course, you can <spanclass="menu">Save</span> a playlist and later <spanclass="menu">Open</span> it again, or start it with simply double-clicking the playlist file.</p>
<p>The first batch, <spanclass="menu">Play mode</span>, is pretty self-explaining. Start playback automatically, close windows when finished or play clips in a loop.</p>
<p>Next are different <spanclass="menu">View options</span>.<br/>
You can opt to <spanclass="menu">Use hardware overlay if available</span>, which cuts down CPU usage but only works for one video window and needs a supporting video card driver.<br/>
You can <spanclass="menu">Scale movies smoothly</span> (when not in overlay mode) which uses very fast filtering to smooth over otherwise blocky pixels when zooming video or watching in full-screen mode.<br/>
<spanclass="menu">Scale controls in full-screen mode</span> if you prefer slightly bigger controls, maybe because you watch the screen from a bit farther away when in full-screen mode.<br/>
Then there are settings for <spanclass="menu">Subtitle size</span> and <spanclass="menu">Subtitle placement</span>. They can be shown at the <spanclass="menu">Bottom of video</span>, which will always have them overlayed over the picture. Or <spanclass="menu">Bottom of window</span>, which allows you to resize the window vertically and have the subtitles appear in the black bar at the bottom instead.</p>
<p>The last setting determines the volume of clips whose windows are not currently active. You can have them all blaring at <spanclass="menu">Full volume</span>, at less confusing <spanclass="menu">Low volume</span> or quietly <spanclass="menu">Muted</span>.</p>
<p>These keys are assigned to the functions of the control buttons. They are always the bottom left letter keys on the keyboard, i.e. they are used independently of your current keymapping. The above keys correspond to a standard US-american keymap.</p>
<tr><tdalign="right"><spanclass="key">ALT</span><spanclass="key">ENTER</span></td><td></td><td>Toggle full-screen mode (also done by double left-clicking the video area or pressing <spanclass="key">F</span> or <spanclass="key">TAB</span>)</td></tr>
<tr><tdclass="onelinetop"align="right"><spanclass="key">ALT</span><spanclass="key">SHIFT</span><spanclass="key">0</span> / <spanclass="key">1</span> / <spanclass="key">2</span> / <spanclass="key">3</span></td><td></td><td>Changes aspect ratio to <spanclass="menu">Stream settings</span> (how the video was encoded), <spanclass="menu">No aspect correction</span> (maps the pixels of the video 1:1 to the screen), <spanclass="menu">4:3</span>, <spanclass="menu">16:9</span></td></tr>