It appears that with R16 it is no longer possible to create or modify dynamic name formula unless the standard [title] tag is used.
I formerly used a formula that had a custom tag that I used in the string instead of [title]. I called it [TrackFilename]
I installed R16 on a new Windows 10 PC, created all of the custom tags I previously used, but CD Ripper will not let me save the change the [TrackFilename] tag to [title].
The entire formula:
[composer]\[genre]\[tag]SubGenre[]\[tag]Composition[]\[tag]AlbumFolderName[]\[tag]CompositionPart[]\FLAC\[tag]TrackFilename[]
This is unfortunate, because I want to use a different naming convention for the track names than I used for the title.
I also went back to the older PC, which was originally R15 but was in-place upgraded to R16 a few months ago.
The formula above is what is in place on that installation, and it works exactly as desired.
But if I open the dialogue try to save it without any changes I get that same prompt telling me I cannot.
Is there a way to override this behavior?
I formerly used a formula that had a custom tag that I used in the string instead of [title]. I called it [TrackFilename]
I installed R16 on a new Windows 10 PC, created all of the custom tags I previously used, but CD Ripper will not let me save the change the [TrackFilename] tag to [title].
The entire formula:
[composer]\[genre]\[tag]SubGenre[]\[tag]Composition[]\[tag]AlbumFolderName[]\[tag]CompositionPart[]\FLAC\[tag]TrackFilename[]
This is unfortunate, because I want to use a different naming convention for the track names than I used for the title.
I also went back to the older PC, which was originally R15 but was in-place upgraded to R16 a few months ago.
The formula above is what is in place on that installation, and it works exactly as desired.
But if I open the dialogue try to save it without any changes I get that same prompt telling me I cannot.
Is there a way to override this behavior?
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