![]() Or you can convert to multiple formats at the same time etc. One advantage of foobar2000 is you can load a bunch of files into a playlist, highlight them all, right click and select a conversion preset, and it'll encode as many simultaneously as you have CPU cores until it's done. It'll also automatically tag and it'll probably use tags for naming too if you want it to, but I don't use it for tagging much myself as I'm accustomed to Mp3Tag. foobar2000 will do both for you and you can save the way it names files as part of a conversion preset. I think foobar2000 has been suggested previously, but as you mentioned the automatic naming of files and batch encoding earlier. Likewise it can use the file names to automatically create tags. As an example, if you have a bunch of files correctly tagged, you can tell Mp3Tag to rename them using your desired format (Artist-Track-Title, or Title-Artist etc). In case you haven't used it much, Mp3Tag is very handy for renaming files and/or tagging according to file name etc. but yeah I think the limitations are pretty much just what has already been mentioned. aside from using Mp3Tag to copy and paste them as ID3v2.3 before removing them. It's been a while since I've paid much attention to ID3v1 tags. I think for that reason, a while back foobar2000 reverted to writing 2.3 tags by default instead of 2.4 I use ID3 version 2.3 tags myself because ID3 version 1 is too limited and ID3 version 2.4 isn't as widely supported. For instance if you open a bunch of files containing ID3 version 1 tags but Mp3Tag is set to only display ID3 version 2, I don't think you'll see any tags until you change the setting, but once you get your head around that I think it's a good system for working with multiple tags in the same file. Generally I'd re-encode so the output MP3s have the same file names as the input flac files, therefore I'd order them by file name in Mp3Tag.īecause multiple types and versions of tags can be stored in the same file, Mp3Tag has a few options regarding which tags it'll display and which tags it writes etc. Just make sure when you open each they're ordered in the same way so you don't end up pasting the tags into the wrong files. ![]() Mp3 encoder for eac full#Open the folder full of encoded MP3s with Mp3Tag, highlight, right click and paste. Just open the folder containing the original flac files (or just the files you converted) with Mp3Tag, highlight them all, right click and use the option for copying tags. If you're converting a large number of files to MP3 and the originals are correctly tagged you can copy all the tags from the flac files to the MP3 files quite easily with Mp3Tag. I don't bother with tagging while encoding as invariably I'll want to check/edit the tags anyway. ![]() So does anyone know what's this about with ffmpeg? I actually never encode to mp3, but when I do I normally use Lame. PAUSEDirect flac-to-mp3 with id3v2.4 tag using FFmpeg. In both cases you need Tag, because even with a direct flac-to-mp3 Lame can't copy the tag. PAUSEAs mentioned earlier by smok3, this lame version accepts Flac-files directly. ![]() %pathToLame% -V 5 -nohist -noreplaygain %1 "%~dpn1.mp3"
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