I tend to use "Pop/Rock" as a genre for a lot of albums and this seems to get written into the metadata as "Pop\Rock". Using dBpoweramp 64 bit 15.1 on Windows 8.
Bug in metadata with forward slash character
Collapse
X
-
Re: Bug in metadata with forward slash character
This is because '/' is a seperator in ALAC. If you want Pop/Rock in Alac set the genre to Pop; Rock this is the standard way for dBpoweramp to specify 2 genres.Comment
-
Re: Bug in metadata with forward slash character
R.Comment
-
Re: Bug in metadata with forward slash character
Bringing back an old thread... I see the same thing encoding to AAC. While it doesn't matter too much, it creates an oddity when the genre is pulled from AMG as "Pop/Rock", and put into my FLAC files as "Pop/Rock." When I encode to mp3, it stays as "Pop/Rock", but when I encode that same FLAC file to AAC, it shows up as "Pop\Rock" (backslash instead of forward slash.)
The inconsistency is what's so very annoying here. I have some files with forward slashes and others with backslashes. I think it'd be better if a decision was made on ONE way to do it, and then to do it consistently.
GaryComment
-
Re: Bug in metadata with forward slash character
I'm being facetious, of course. This is just one....a minor one...of the many inconvenient, annoying, aggravating differences that must be accommodated when converting between codecs and metadata systems. For the most part, dBp does an excellent job of making the appropriate changes for us.Comment
-
Re: Bug in metadata with forward slash character
Hey Spoon,
Are there definitions of standard separaters for the different codecs? What are the separaters for FLAC and mp3?
Dat EiComment
-
Re: Bug in metadata with forward slash character
For endusers, what is actually written to file for the different formats should be transparent/irrelevant. Endusers need only be concerned with what each software application uses to handle/display the multi-value tags.
e.g. dBpoweramp uses '; ' as the separator for all file formats, whereas MP3Tag uses '\\'.Comment
Comment