9/5/2023 0 Comments Cannot edit tag 1 kid3![]() Now that Clementine is working I'll have to take a closer look at Kid3 and play around with it. It's very powerful so it's easy to screw up a whole lot if you're not careful, but it's also very nifty. I wish I had found this when Clementine first bit the dust. So that got me to thinking that maybe taglib was not involved with Clementine's inability to edit meta data.Īnyway, in my agony to solve my problem to edit the title field I found a hidden application in KDE called Kid3 (I say hidden because it never showed up in my searches for "meta" or "data" or "taglib"). There were no error messages except for the usual ones. On a hunch, I removed taglib from synaptic just to see how it effected Clementine. I checked to see if taglib had an update but that was a wash. So I tried EasyTag which worked when nothing else did. I checked once again to see if Clementine worked but it didn't. Prior to this recent update I needed to edit the title data in audio tracks uploaded from a CD. UPDATE: Clementine was just updated and now it apparently is able to edit the meta data in media files. That's the only culprit I can point to, at least for now. Anybody have an thoughts on this or have the same problem? I believe the problem is with taglib, since that is when things went south. I also thought it might be a problem with KDE but it doesn't work in xfce either. I even tried launching the applications as root, thinking it was a permission problem but still no go. This is the case for every application that has the feature of editing meta information. Rest assured that we will be taking this purposed request and will be forwarding this request to our Quality Assurance Team as well as the BluOS Development Lab for their consideration for a future update.Ever since I updated taglib to taglib 1.11-1 I haven't been able to update or in the case of Clementine, even have access to the meta data in media files. The app itself is always being worked on and updated. Please understand that no version of the app is the final version and we are always working to improve the experience based on customer feedback. We are always developing the app, continuing to expand on the features and deliver the best possible listening experience to those who are living with us in our HiFi Family. I finally used Audacity (a bit of a learning curve, but VERY highly recommended) to convert the. Got lots of platitudes, but as you can tell, no action. I use Kid3 and MP3tag extensively, and the files were all very clean - no unneeded tags consistent numbering, etc. I raised this as a support issue a couple of years ago, on an album with mixed. Hello, Bluesound, you have a good program here, pay attention to this strange anomaly. Once in awhile, rarely, I just convert the mp3 to a flac, after giving up using the other methods. 5) Sometimes, when a mixed playlist, use :"Various Artists" for album artist, or when not, make sure the album artist is listed the same way throughout. 4) Delete double listings of artists or album artists. 2) Get rid of the disc number entirely or make sure it is "1/1". Generally, I 1) order the track numbers in integers only, like "3", no "3/12". Over time, I have solved this **almost** always by being thorough about editing the tags. The issue really is why file type or quality trumps internal track numbers. This is one of those "features" people sitting around a table somewhere thought would be helpful, but actually - few people think this way about files in folders. Workarounds should not be necessary, because the intended logic of sorting files just by quality escapes me. ![]() I posted the original comment here, and it is clear this is still an issue.
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