I'll call them input.264, input.ogg, input.ass, but they can be anything.ġ. For the simplicity, assume you put your source files in the same folder (D:\mkvtoolnix). To use command line things, let's say you downloaded a standalone version of MKVToolnix, and unzipped the files in D:\mkvtoolnix (that is, a folder named "mkvtoolnix" in the root of your D: drive). Many players show this text for the track. You can also write "English" in the "Track name" edit-box, when creating your mkv using mkvroolnix-gui.exe. Yes I am using Windows, this would be my first foray in creating a batch file, so hopefully I'll get the hang of it, I'm not sure what you mean by setting the language to "eng" as I couldn't find that setting anywhere unless you meant adjusting the header editor which is how I'm making such changes now? When no language was specified it was indeed left as undefined allowing the video player to decide on what to report. Of course you can set the language to eng in the MKVTOOLNIX GUI and it should be honoured. Nope, its not set and forget as this is a manual process to add the audio/subtitle languages using a bat file. Then run the bat file and copy back the updated files to your video folder. If you don't wish to update all files, the best approach would be to create a test folder, add the bat file to the test folder, copy over any MKV files you wish to update. You then double click the bat file and it should set the audio
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