A library for parsing and manipulating Advanced SubStation Alpha subtitle files.
Example file: tests/test.ass
You can parse the file:
>>> import ass
>>> with open("tests/test.ass", encoding='utf_8_sig') as f:
... doc = ass.parse(f)
...
Access its meta info:
>>> doc.info
ScriptInfoSection('Script Info', OrderedDict([('ScriptType', 'v4.00+'), ('PlayResX', 500), ('PlayResY', 500)]))
>>> doc.info['PlayResX']
500
Access its styles:
>>> doc.styles
StylesSection('V4+ Styles', [Style(name='Default', fontname='Arial', fontsize=20.0, primary_color=Color(r=0xff, g=0xff, b=0xff, a=0x00), secondary_color=Color(r=0xff, g=0x00, b=0x00, a=0x00), outline_color=Color(r=0x00, g=0x00, b=0x00, a=0x00), back_color=Color(r=0x00, g=0x00, b=0x00, a=0x00), bold=False, italic=False, underline=False, strike_out=False, scale_x=100.0, scale_y=100.0, spacing=0.0, angle=0.0, border_style=1, outline=1.0, shadow=2.0, alignment=5, margin_l=10, margin_r=10, margin_v=10, encoding=1)])
>>> doc.styles[0].fontname
'Arial'
>>> doc.styles[0].primary_color # "color", not "colour"
Color(r=0xff, g=0xff, b=0xff, a=0x00)
Access its event lines:
>>> doc.events
EventsSection('Events', [Dialogue(layer=0, start=datetime.timedelta(0), end=datetime.timedelta(seconds=5), style='Default', name='', margin_l=0, margin_r=0, margin_v=0, effect='', text='{\\3c&H0000FF}this is a test\\N{\\3c&H00FF00}this is a test\\N{\\3c&HFF0000}this is a test'), ...])
>>> doc.events[0].text
'{\\3c&H0000FF}this is a test\\N{\\3c&H00FF00}this is a test\\N{\\3c&HFF0000}this is a test'
Or any other section data:
>>> list(doc.sections.keys())
['Script Info', 'Aegisub Project Garbage', 'Custom Section', 'V4+ Styles', 'Events', 'Aegisub Extradata']
>>> doc.sections['Aegisub Project Garbage']['Scroll Position']
'30'
You can dump everything out into ASS format, too:
>>> doc.events[0].dump()
'0,0:00:00.00,0:00:05.00,Default,,0,0,0,,{\\3c&H0000FF}this is a test\\N{\\3c&H00FF00}this is a test\\N{\\3c&HFF0000}this is a test'
Or maybe the whole file:
>>> with open("out.ass", "w", encoding='utf_8_sig') as f:
... doc.dump_file(f)
...
For parsing ASS tags, you may want to consider ass-tag-parser
:
https://pypi.org/project/ass-tag-parser/
(on GitHub).
The following has been unmaintained for years.
python-ass can use libass for rendering.
First you need to allocate a libass context:
>>> ctx = ass.renderer.Context()
Then you need to convert the ass.document.Document
to a ass.renderer.Track
:
>>> t = ctx.make_track()
>>> t.populate(doc)
Then make a renderer to render the track:
>>> r = ctx.make_renderer()
>>> r.set_fonts(fontconfig_config="/usr/local/etc/fonts/fonts.conf")
>>> r.set_all_sizes((1280, 720))
You can render a frame at a given time:
>>> imgs = r.render_frame(t, timedelta(0))
Example using PIL to render to a bitmap:
>>> im_out = Image.new("RGB", (1280, 720))
>>> im_data = im_out.load()
>>> for img in imgs:
... r, g, b, a = img.rgba
... for y in range(img.h):
... for x in range(img.w):
... a_src = img[x, y] * (256 - a) // 256
... r_dst, g_dst, b_dst = im_data[x + img.dst_x, y + img.dst_y]
... r_out = ((r * a_src) + (r_dst * (256 - a_src))) // 256
... g_out = ((g * a_src) + (g_dst * (256 - a_src))) // 256
... b_out = ((b * a_src) + (b_dst * (256 - a_src))) // 256
... im_data[x + img.dst_x, y + img.dst_y] = (r_out, g_out, b_out)
...
>>> im_out.show()