EasyTag
EasyTag (stylised as EasyTAG) is a graphical tag editor for Linux and Microsoft Windows. An attempt to bring EasyTAG to OS X is ongoing.[2] It is written in C and relies on GTK+ and id3lib for graphics and ID3 tag handling respectively. As of version 2.1.1, EasyTag also uses the tag manipulation library provided by the MAD project, for support of ID3v2.4.
Screenshot of EasyTag 2.1.9 | |
Original author(s) | Jérôme Couderc |
---|---|
Developer(s) | David King |
Initial release | May 2000 |
Stable release | 2.4.3
/ 5 December 2016 |
Repository | |
Written in | C and GTK+ |
Operating system | Windows and Linux[1] |
Type | Tag editor |
License | GPLv2+ |
Website | wiki |
EasyTag is free and open-source software subject to the terms of the GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
Features
- Supported formats: MP3, MP2, FLAC, Opus, Speex, Ogg Vorbis, MP4, MPC and APE
- Available tag fields (depending on format): Title, Artist, Album, Disc Album, Year, Track Number, Genre, Comment, Composer, Original Artist, Copyright, URL, Encoder and Picture
- Automated tagging using presets and custom masks
- Rename files using tag information or external text files
- Apply changes in a field (Artist, Album...) to all selected files
- Read and display file header information (bitrate, time...)
- CDDB support
- Tree based browser or a view by artist and album
- Recursion into subdirectories
- Playlist generator
- Undo/redo function
gollark: For example:- the average person probably does *some* sort of illegal/shameful/bad/whatever stuff, and if some organization has information on that it can use it against people it wants to discredit (basically, information leads to power, so information asymmetry leads to power asymmetry). This can happen if you decide to be an activist or something much later, even- having lots of data on you means you can be manipulated more easily (see, partly, targeted advertising, except that actually seems to mostly be poorly targeted)- having a government be more effective at detecting minor crimes (which reduced privacy could allow for) might *not* actually be a good thing, as some crimes (drug use, I guess?) are kind of stupid and at least somewhat tolerable because they *can't* be entirely enforced practically
gollark: No, it probably isn't your fault, it must have been dropped from my brain stack while I was writing the rest.
gollark: ... I forgot one of them, hold on while I try and reremember it.
gollark: That's probably one of them. I'm writing.
gollark: > If you oppose compromises to privacy on the grounds that you could do something that is misidentified as a crime, being more transparent does helpI mean, sure. But I worry about lacking privacy for reasons other than "maybe the government will use partial data or something and accidentally think I'm doing crimes".
See also
References
- https://wiki.gnome.org/Apps/EasyTAG/FAQ
- "EasyTAG for Mac". Archived from the original on 2015-03-10. Retrieved 2016-01-13.
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