DESCRIPTION

The internal format database is usually stored in /etc/lltag/formats. The user may override this file by defining a $HOME/.lltag/formats. If this file exists, the system-wide one is ignored.

These files contain entries starting with a line such as:

[%n - %a - %t]

A title between bracket that will be displayed at runtime.

Then, the following 3 lines must be given to explain how the format is actually used to parse filenames:

type = basename

The type is either basename (to parse the last part of the path to a file) or path (to parse the directory part of the path to a file). When actually parsing the path to target files, basename and path parsers will be assembled. All possible combination will be tried.

regexp = %L%N%S-%S%A%S-%S%A%L

A string composed of any characters, with the following special fields:

%L for delimiter (empty by default, multiple spaces if --spaces was given)

%S for a space (or multiple spaces if --spaces was given)

%N for numbers

%A for an alphanumeric string without /

%P for any path (alphanumeric string with /)

%% for %

indices = NUMBER,ARTIST,TITLE

A list of fields to match (either given by their full name or associated letter) corresponding to each %N or %A field in the previous format. It may be AUTHOR (or a), ALBUM (A), GENRE (g), NUMBER (n), TITLE (t), DATE (d), COMMENT (c) or IGNORE (i). See also FORMAT in the manpage of lltag for details about these fields.

RELATED TO lltag_formats…

AUTHOR

Brice Goglin