![]() ![]() On the toolbar of “ID3 tags” area, click “Generate tags”: The only question now is: how to import the information to ID3 tags? Imagine that you have a group of files with no information in tags and filenames like: 01.mp3įortunately, you also have a database of tags saved to a CSV file: 01.mp3 Kylie Minogue Wow Now let’s see how mp3Tag Pro uses CSV files. For many reasons, semicolon is usually the best delimiter. They can also be separated by commas and tabs (which is where the names of the formats come from: CSV – comma separated values, TSV – tab separated values). ![]() In the above example, values are separated by semicolons. Most applications (including MS Excel, MS Access etc.) can export data into these formats, so the feature can be used with virtually every database.Ī typical CSV file contains a number of lines that look like:įilename title artist album year genre comment Those are usual text files that follow simple rules. Mp3Tag Pro can read tags from CSV and TSV files. Thousands audio files can be processed in a single step. This feature allows importing tags from a database. However, there is another powerful feature that you may find quite valuable for large collections, especially if you work with music professionally. It is also possible to generate tags from filenames and folder names. If ID3 tags of your music files are incomplete or missing, the MP3 tag editor can download information from internet services, like FreeDB, Discogs, MusicBrainz, Amazon. ![]()
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