more updates to the specs; comments and general fixing
Originally committed to SVN as r1413.
This commit is contained in:
parent
0e6ae5aaad
commit
d9490b7cba
1 changed files with 21 additions and 11 deletions
|
@ -133,11 +133,19 @@ store program-specific data. For example, Aegisub would create a group called
|
|||
by the fact that it starts with \emph{``[Private:''}.
|
||||
|
||||
Note that \emph{Format:} lines from the previous formats are not admitted in AS5. If the parser
|
||||
finds any of them, it \must\ halt parsing.
|
||||
finds any of them, or any other unrecognized lines not specified here outside the \emph{[Private:]}
|
||||
section, it \must\ halt parsing, rejecting the file as invalid, and it \should\ emit a warning
|
||||
specifying where the problem lies.
|
||||
|
||||
The sections \may\ be written in any order, with the exception of the \emph{[AS5]} section which
|
||||
\must\ always be the first section.
|
||||
|
||||
Any line where the first character is a semicolon (\textit{;} - U+3B) is considered a "comment line"
|
||||
and \must\ be ignored by the parser; they also \must\ be preserved by an editing program when resaving.
|
||||
It is suggested that an editing program \should\ check whether commented lines are actually valid AS5
|
||||
lines, and if they are, display them to the user in some way as "disabled" lines. Note that commented
|
||||
out lines \must not\ influence subtitle rendering in any way.
|
||||
|
||||
\subsubsection{[AS5]}
|
||||
This \must\ be the first section in every AS5 file. If the very first line of the file is not
|
||||
[AS5], the file \must\ be rejected by the parser as invalid. Note, however, that the first
|
||||
|
@ -192,7 +200,7 @@ Subtitling programs \should\ be able to display this title to the user.
|
|||
\end{itemize}
|
||||
|
||||
Unlike in the previous incarnations of the format, storing private data here is not allowed, which means
|
||||
that this section \must not\ contain any properties not listed here. Any application-specific or otherwise
|
||||
that this section \must\ \not\ contain any properties not listed here. Any application-specific or otherwise
|
||||
private data \must\ be stored in \textit{[Private:PROGNAME]} groups instead, as mentioned above.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
|
@ -222,7 +230,7 @@ the script's global default style \must\ be used. If an unknown style name is sp
|
|||
fallback to default, and \may\ issue a warning.
|
||||
\item User: This field is used by the program to store program-specific data in each line. Renderers
|
||||
\should\ ignore this (but \may\ use it for application-specific extension features). This field \should\
|
||||
be left blank if it's not used. Note that whatever data is stored here \must not\ contain any commas!
|
||||
be left blank if it's not used. Note that whatever data is stored here \must\ \not\ contain any commas!
|
||||
\item Content: The actual text of the line. This contains actual text and override tags. See the section
|
||||
on override tags for more information.
|
||||
\end{itemize}
|
||||
|
@ -315,7 +323,8 @@ this way of declaring styles is identical to the one above, but is more verbose.
|
|||
|
||||
If no Default style is defined, the renderer \must\ choose its own defaults to render the text with.
|
||||
These are entirely arbitrary and can be set to anything, but the renderer \should\ let the user set
|
||||
his own defaults. A simple Sans-Serif font with white text and black borders is recommended.
|
||||
his own defaults. A simple Sans-Serif font with white text and black borders is recommended if the
|
||||
user does not specify anything.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
\subsubsection{[Resources]}
|
||||
|
@ -380,12 +389,12 @@ So, for example, you would use \textbackslash 1c or \textbackslash c to set the
|
|||
\textbackslash 3c to set the colour of the border. \textbackslash \$c, however, does not exist in
|
||||
itself.
|
||||
|
||||
When a tag requires a floating point parameter, the decimal part must be specified using a period (.);
|
||||
When a tag requires a floating point parameter, the decimal part \must\ be specified using a period (.);
|
||||
never a comma. When a tag requires a colour parameter, it is given in HTML hexadecimal code, which is
|
||||
\# followed by a 6-digit hexadecimal string, where the first two digits represent the red component,
|
||||
the next two the green component, and the last two the blue component (\#RRGGBB). Sub Station Alpha
|
||||
style (Visual Basic hexadecimal) is not supported - if a parser finds any colour in \&HBBGGRR\& format,
|
||||
it \must\ issue an error.
|
||||
style (Visual Basic hexadecimal) is not supported - if a parser finds any colour in a format it does
|
||||
not recognize (including the SSA \&HBBGGRR\& format) it \must\ issue a warning and ignore the tag.
|
||||
|
||||
In the tag specification in this document, optional parameters are denoted by being enclosed by square
|
||||
brackets (``[]''), and may be ommitted. For example, \emph{\textbackslash baseline(curve1[,curve2])}
|
||||
|
@ -394,12 +403,13 @@ is enclosed in square brackets, e.g. \emph{\textbackslash vc[(c1,c2,c3,c4)]}.
|
|||
|
||||
Any tag might have its parameter enclosed inside parenthesis (``()''), but some tags require it. In
|
||||
particular, any tag that has more than on parameter, or whose parameter is text requires parenthesis.
|
||||
The parser \must\ issue a warning and disregard the tag if it ommitted mandatory parenthesis.
|
||||
The parser \must\ issue a warning and disregard the tag if it omits mandatory parenthesises.
|
||||
|
||||
It is forbidden to write comments inside standard curly brackets. Any unknown tags \must\ be ignored,
|
||||
and anything that doesn't begin with a backslash \must\ be considered an error. For inline comments,
|
||||
you need to use a special variation, in which the first character inside the overrides block is an
|
||||
asterisk (*). Renderers \must\ completely ignore any text inside such blocks. For example:
|
||||
(the parser \should\ issue warnings about unknown tags) and anything that doesn't begin with a backslash
|
||||
\must\ be considered an error. For inline comments, you need to use a special variation, in which the
|
||||
first character inside the overrides block is an asterisk (*). Renderers \must\ completely ignore
|
||||
any text inside such blocks. For example:
|
||||
|
||||
\begin{verbatim}
|
||||
{\fn(Verdana)\fs26\c#FFA040}Welcome to {\b1}AS5{\b0}!{*It's a nifty format, isn't it?}
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue