PupCaps! is a Node.js script that makes it easy to add captions to your videos with fully customizable styles. Design your captions using CSS, allowing complete control over fonts, colors, positioning, and more. CSS3 animations are supported.
You will probably also be interested in Transcriptionist, a tool that uses AI to extract captions from video files.
You need node
to be installed on your computer.
If ffmpeg
binary is missing on your system, it will be installed automatically.
From npm:
npm i -g pupcaps@latest
or from sources:
git clone [email protected]:hosuaby/PupCaps.git
cd PupCaps
npm install
npm i -g .
To use the script, you need a SubRip Subtitle (.srt) file. PupCaps enables you to create Karaoke-style captioning
(also known as "word-by-word highlighting"). You can use Transcriptionist to extract .srt
from the original video file.
To achieve this effect, wrap the words you want to highlight in square brackets. For example:
1
00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:00.500
A script to caption videos with style.
2
00:00:00.500 --> 00:00:01.000
[A] script to caption videos with style.
3
00:00:01.000 --> 00:00:01.500
A [script] to caption videos with style.
4
00:00:01.500 --> 00:00:02.000
A script [to] caption videos with style.
Run the PupCaps script to transform your .srt
file into an Apple QuickTime (MOV) file.
This MOV file will serve as a captions overlay for your video.
pupcaps path/to/subtitles.srt
This command will produce .mov
in the same folder with subtitles (unless you provided --output
option).
Check section "Caption video" to learn how to use this file as overlay.
The resulting .mov
file will be saved in the same folder as the input .srt
file unless you specify a different
output path using the --output
option. Example:
pupcaps path/to/subtitles.srt --output path/to/output.mov
To learn how to overlay the generated .mov
file on your video, see the section: "Caption Video."
The appearance of captions can be fully customized using CSS. To do this, copy the contents of the file assets/captions.css and modify it to suit your preferences.
CSS allows you to define styles at various levels:
- The container (captions as a whole).
- Each phrase.
- Individual words.
- Highlighted words for dynamic effects.
Once you've customized your .css
file, provide it to the PupCaps script using the --style
option:
pupcaps path/to/subtitles.srt --style path/to/custom/styles.css
CSS3 provides virtually limitless possibilities for styling captions, including advanced animations. For instance, you can create a karaoke-style effect where the background color of a highlighted word gradually changes:
@keyframes shrinkPadding {
from {
padding: 30px;
background-color: #ff92eb;
}
to {
padding: 12px;
background-color: #670abd;
}
}
.word.highlighted {
text-shadow: none;
animation: shrinkPadding 0.333s ease-in-out;
}
To ensure that CSS3 animations are rendered in the output video, use the --animate
option.
Warning
Enabling the --animate
option forces the script to record captions in real-time, meaning the recording process will
run for the entire duration of the original video. Use this option only if your captions rely on CSS3 animations.
pupcaps path/to/subtitles.srt --style path/to/custom/styles.css --animate
Usage: pupcaps [options] <file>
Argument | Description |
---|---|
file | Path to the input SubRip Subtitle (.srt) file. |
Option | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
-o, --output | Full or relative path where the created Films Apple QuickTime (MOV) file should be written. By default, it will be saved in the same directory as the input subtitle file. | |
-w, --width | 1080 | Width of the video in pixels. |
-h, --height | 1920 | Height of the video in pixels. |
-s, --style | Full or relative path to the styles .css file. If not provided, default styles for captions will be used. | |
-r, --fps | 30 | Specifies the frame rate (FPS) of the output video. Valid values are between 1 and 60. |
-a, --animate | Records captions with CSS3 animations. Note: The recording will run for the entire duration of the video. Use this option only if your captions involve CSS3 animations. | |
--preview | Prevents the script from generating a video file. Instead, captions are displayed in the browser for debugging and preview purposes. |
To add captions to your video, use FFmpeg with the filter_complex:overlay
filter.
Below is an example command. You can adjust the codecs and parameters to suit your needs:
ffmpeg \
-i original-video.mp4 \
-i captions.mov \
-filter_complex "[0:v][1:v]overlay=0:0" \
-c:v libx264 -b:v 4M -crf 10 \
-c:a copy \
output.mp4