1/8/2023 0 Comments Jaikoz not finding tags![]() We have updated the jaudiotagger music tagging library, this has over twenty fixes since the last Jaikoz release, and we have fixed a number of Jaikoz bugs recently reported by customers. We also have modified the default settings of Jaikoz to better match the SongKong default profileĪdditionally we have added full support for release level performers, Discogs performers and Roon Recording Location and Dates to match SongKong Some customers use both applications and this meant that if you matched your library in SongKong and then updated them in Jaikoz some fields would get modified, then if you updated in SongKong they would get modified again, this release aims to eliminate this yo-yo ing. Importantly, Jaikoz only replaces cover art with higher quality artwork and unlike iTunes the images are added directly into your files so they are always available whatever music player you are using. Jaikoz and SongKong have similar matching algorithms and support the same metadata fields, but they were doing things a bit differently. When matching with Musicbrainz or Discogs, Jaikoz usually finds album artwork and adds it to your music files. Supporting both these features required updating a number of libraries and alot of code changes, we have other UI improvements on the way but don’t like to make too many drastic changes to the UI in a single release. Perhaps the most requested feature has now been done, we now support multiple-column sorting see Jaikoz and Multi Column Sorting - Jaikoz Announcements - SongKong and Jaikoz Music Tagger Community Forum for more details We now support the main view/edit table being multi tabbed so now you can view many fields without having to scroll to the right, the tabs are fully configurable and you can have as few or many as you like, see Jaikoz Main Edit Table is now Multi Tab - Jaikoz Announcements - SongKong and Jaikoz Music Tagger Community Forum for details. ![]() This release has three main areas of focus: Jaikoz is a great option if you like the idea of SongKongs automated matching but would like more control over your tagging, and we continue to provide a 20% discount on Jaikoz Pro, just enter JAIKOZWITHROON as promo code ![]() We have a new version of Jaikoz, Jaikoz 11.1 Hole full details can be found here Improves the metadata to allow Roon to identify albums it could not previouslyĬan also reorganize folder structure to put split albums back into one album = one folder to help Roon identify.Īdds additional metadata for albums that Roon could identify but has limited informationĪdds metadata for albums that Roon still cannot identify so they display better in Roon Roon cannot always identify all your music, especially if your music includes partial albums or invalid metadata. Roon is a great application for playing your music, but Jaikoz music tagging features can make it even better, and like Roon we really care about metadata. The good news is I have now added the same Roon support to Jaikoz as well Or you may be aware of the SongKong Music Tagger, this is a fully automated tagger with extensive Roon support. If that's what happened here, you need to learn to spot BS3 code so you can ignore it and look elsewhere.Hi, you may already aware of Jaikoz Music Tagger, a comprehensive automatic and manual editing tagger available for MacOS,Windows and and Linux. But people keep copying and pasting old BS3 code into blog posts and Stack Overflow answers, so other people keep getting surprised that the code they found online doesn't actually work. Which shouldn't even need to be mentioned, as BS3 has been dead for nearly a decade, and doesn't run on Python 3.x or, in some cases, even 2.7. Notice that CSS also doesn't care about the order of the classes, or about duplicates: > lect('span.c.a.b.c')Īlso, this allows you to search for a subset of the classes, rather than just one or all of them: > lect('span.c.b')ġ. Or, maybe you don't want to think in DOM terms but in CSS-selector terms: > lect('span.a.b.c') Notice that, even though BeautifulSoup is presenting the values as a list, they actually act more like a set-you can pass the same values in any order, and duplicates are ignored: > soup.find('span', class_=): To search for a multi-valued attribute, you should pass multiple values: > soup.find('span', class_=('a', 'b', 'c')) > soup = BeautifulSoup(text, 'html.parser') The class attribute isn't a normal string, but a multi-valued attribute.
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