Multi-Rename Tool: replace MP3 ID3 track with Artist

English support forum

Moderators: Hacker, petermad, Stefan2, white

btreloar
Junior Member
Junior Member
Posts: 29
Joined: 2009-11-13, 18:31 UTC
Location: East Hanover, NJ, USA
Contact:

Post by *btreloar »

Balderstrom wrote:Use a real tool for handling MP3 Tag -> FileName; vica versa or even MP3 Tag -> Folder / Folders / Filename

E.g. MP3Tag or TagScanner or something.
Wow - Thanks! Lots of info here. Editorial - I HATE underscores. They're a holdover from mainframe days when there was actually an underscore key on the keyboard. Now it takes two keys to type and in my case two hands.

I have my MP3s in genre folders and my naming convention is super simple: artist hyphen songtitle plus extension. I'll see how I can automate this a bit, but it seems AudioInfo ought to be sufficient for my needs. Are the two applications you recommend freeware, shareware or regular commercial applications? My volume is too low to justify much or any expense.
Bill Treloar
btreloar
Junior Member
Junior Member
Posts: 29
Joined: 2009-11-13, 18:31 UTC
Location: East Hanover, NJ, USA
Contact:

Post by *btreloar »

Still drawing a blank. I must be getting dumb in my old age.

I'm unable to make the AudioInfo plugin work in the multi-rename tool, but begin to think I shouldn't really need it. Let me express my goal a little differently:

I want to replace the first three characters of a bunch of file names with a common (longer) longer string that I type in (into the Replace With field?). In other words, I want a single string to replace the first three characters in all of the files I select.

That seems to me like it should be a trivial thing to do in the multi-rename tool. What's the easiest way to do that?
Bill Treloar
User avatar
MVV
Power Member
Power Member
Posts: 8711
Joined: 2008-08-03, 12:51 UTC
Location: Russian Federation

Post by *MVV »

btreloar, use name template like @%&[N4-] and replace @%& with desired string using search and replace feature of MRT. You're free to use any other unique character sequence instead of @%& (but of course the same in both places).
btreloar
Junior Member
Junior Member
Posts: 29
Joined: 2009-11-13, 18:31 UTC
Location: East Hanover, NJ, USA
Contact:

Post by *btreloar »

Thanks, MVV - sounds like we're getting close. However, in the Search field I can't specify a string to replace your @%& because the value of that string is different in every starting filename.

So I tried this:
Search - [N-3][N4-]
Replace - StartChars[N4-]

And I got a warning that would create duplicate filenames. Also, nothing but ".mp3" displayed in the New Name section of the tool.

Clearly I'm missing some basic concepts here. Sorry for the abject ignorance.
Bill Treloar
User avatar
Hacker
Moderator
Moderator
Posts: 13144
Joined: 2003-02-06, 14:56 UTC
Location: Bratislava, Slovakia

Post by *Hacker »

btreloar,
Try putting the following into "Rename mask: file name" in the MRT:
a common (longer) longer string [N4-]

HTH
Roman
Mal angenommen, du drückst Strg+F, wählst die FTP-Verbindung (mit gespeichertem Passwort), klickst aber nicht auf Verbinden, sondern fällst tot um.
btreloar
Junior Member
Junior Member
Posts: 29
Joined: 2009-11-13, 18:31 UTC
Location: East Hanover, NJ, USA
Contact:

Post by *btreloar »

Roman - Thank You!! Not only does it work, but I think I understand why. I kept trying to manage this through the search & replace fields.
Bill Treloar
User avatar
Hacker
Moderator
Moderator
Posts: 13144
Joined: 2003-02-06, 14:56 UTC
Location: Bratislava, Slovakia

Post by *Hacker »

btreloar,
Glad to have helped. :)

Roman
Mal angenommen, du drückst Strg+F, wählst die FTP-Verbindung (mit gespeichertem Passwort), klickst aber nicht auf Verbinden, sondern fällst tot um.
Post Reply