![]() This will set the title, artist, album and track values in all files. ![]() Therefore we select all files, then click the To: Tag 1 button in the File section. Lazy as we are, we want to use the information in the folder and file names to generate tags. All files will be displayed in the file listbox. We use File → Open menu item (or toolbar button) and select one of the files in this folder. These files have no tags yet and we want to generate them using Kid3. But back to our example, the folder listing looks like this: Besides this, the artist and album information is already in the folder name and does not have to be repeated in the filename. The folder contains the tracks in the "track title.mp3" format, which I think is useful because the filenames are short (important when using mobile MP3 players with small displays) and in the correct order when sorted alphabetically (important when using hardware MP3 players which play the tracks in alphabetical order or in the order in which they are burnt on CD and that order is alphabetical when using mkisofs). The folder is named in the "artist - album" format, in our case One Hit Wonder - Let's Tag. Let's assume we have a folder containing MP3 files with the tracks from the album "Let's Tag" from the band "One Hit Wonder". ![]() This section describes a typical session with Kid3. Exported CSV files can be imported again. Export as CSV, HTML, playlist, Kover XML and other formats.Import from, MusicBrainz, Discogs, Amazon and other data sources.Automatic case conversion and string translation.Generate and change folder names from tags.Generate tags from the contents of tag fields.Edit MP3, Ogg/Vorbis, Opus, DSF, FLAC, MPC, APE, MP4/AAC, MP2, Speex, TrueAudio, WavPack, WMA, WAV and AIFF tags.Please report any problems or feature requests to the author. The import format is freely configurable by regular expressions. The tag information for full albums can be taken from, MusicBrainz, Discogs, Amazon or other sources of track lists. Automatic control of upper and lower case characters makes it easy to use a consistent naming scheme in all tags. The editing task is further supported by automatic replacement of characters or substrings, for instance to remove illegal characters from filenames. It is also possible to set the file name according to the tags found in the file in arbitrary formats. If the information for the tags is contained in the file name, the tags can be automatically set from the file name. ![]() the artist, album, year and genre of all files of an album typically have the same values and can be set together. Tags of multiple files can be set to the same value, e.g. Where most other programs can edit either ID3v1 or ID3v2 tags, Kid3 has full control over both versions, can convert tags between the two formats and has access to all ID3v2 tags. with as few mouse clicks and key strokes as possible. Kid3 does not grab nor encode MP3 files, but it is targeted to edit the ID3 tags of all files of an album in an efficient way, i.e. Moreover the tags in Ogg/Vorbis, Opus, DSF, FLAC, MPC, APE, MP4/AAC, MP2, Speex, TrueAudio, WavPack, WMA, WAV, AIFF files and tracker modules (MOD, S3M, IT, XM) are supported too. These tags can be edited by most MP3 players, but not in a very comfortable and efficient way. Kid3 is an application to edit the ID3v1 and ID3v2 tags in MP3 files in an efficient way. See the section about kid3-cli for a description of the available commands. Multiple -c options are possible, they are executed in sequence. The base file name of the desktop entry for this application. If one or more file paths are given, their common folder is opened and the files are selected. If FILE is the path to a folder, it will be opened. Store configuration in file kid3.ini inside application folder.
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