I have returned to report my success. While removing VLC and reinstalling 1.1.1 did not help, removing VLC and installing 1.0.5. did help! The building font cache -problem has disappeared!I also have this problem. I believe it started when I installed Open Office. I assume that Open Office adds some fonts to Windows and that fonts are somehow at the core of this issue.
Every time I try to open any file in VLC, I get the message about "building font cache". This message does not go away. It never finished building anything. It just hangs there. If I try to cancel it, VLC stops responding, but doesn't stop this eternal process of building nothing that takes up all system resources, so summoning up Task Manager to cancel the damn thing takes the better part of 5 minutes. This is HIGHLY ANNOYING.
I've tried disabling plugins cache. This did nothing.
I've tried to delete the VLC folder under AppData -> Roaming. This did nothing.
I've tried completely uninstalling VLC and removing all VLC-related files from the computer, and then reinstalling. This did nothing. (How that is possible, I have no idea. It just did not work, though I can think of no worldly reason for why it wouldn't.)
So, at the moment I can't think of any way to get VLC to work...
Could it be that VLC and OpenOffice can't be used on the same computer together with this version of VLC?
Right now I am going to uninstall VLC and completely purge my system of any VLC-related files, again. Them I am going to try installing 1.0.5. (From here: http://download.videolan.org/pub/videol ... 0.5/win32/)
Wish me luck.
P.S. This latest version of VLC has been highly odd. The video playback has developed weird blocky artefacts that were never there and the audio playback has weird choppy errors in it. What's up? I assume the video artefacts have something to do with GPU-acceleration. (Which I haven't found a way to disable yet.)
On my computer, the VLC AppData is at C: -> Users ->UserName -> AppData -> Roaming -> vlcThe problem is in your font-cache file that isn't created... Either because your %appdata%/vlc isn't accessible to fontconfig, or because you added fonts (it will run once) or because you don't let it do what it should...
Yes, it is for subtitles and other text rendering options.What is the purpose of the font cache anyway?
Is it for subtitles?
I wish it were only for that, but that dialog shows up even for my own .avi files, transferred from my DV camera, where no text/translation/whatever text exists. It is extremely annoying specially because if I click "Cancel" right away, the program hangs or appears to do nothing more. I have to close VLC, restart it, see that stupid dialog again, click Cancel again and hopefully after a few cancel/kill/restart cycles the movie eventually starts without asking about a font for nothing.Yes, it is for subtitles and other text rendering options.What is the purpose of the font cache anyway?
Is it for subtitles?
If it's only for subtitles and text rendering, why can't it be disabled?Yes, it is for subtitles and other text rendering options.What is the purpose of the font cache anyway?
Is it for subtitles?
Exactly!I wish it were only for that, but that dialog shows up even for my own .avi files, transferred from my DV camera, where no text/translation/whatever text exists. It is extremely annoying specially because if I click "Cancel" right away, the program hangs or appears to do nothing more. I have to close VLC, restart it, see that stupid dialog again, click Cancel again and hopefully after a few cancel/kill/restart cycles the movie eventually starts without asking about a font for nothing.Yes, it is for subtitles and other text rendering options.What is the purpose of the font cache anyway?
Is it for subtitles?
Cristi
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