Set-Up for Ripping
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Re: Set-Up for Ripping
I seems like I've gotten some negative response to the overview which I posted to state my understanding of dbpa, in hopes any errors it contains would prompt someone on the forum to point the errors out and explain my error so I could learn. That hasn't really happened; however, in reviewing the responses I did get I may have scoped out one possible area of confusion. I hope someone will either confirm that I've got it right or else explain it to me.
At the top of the main screen are seven input boxes (eleven if genre is classical or opera). These input boxes have names; I'll use as an example the box labeled "composer." Is "composer" the tag, or does tag refer to the words that the user types into the box, e.g. "Beethoven"?
This is a pretty fundamental issue and I'd better get this right in order to understand anything.
Thanks,
DonComment
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Re: Set-Up for Ripping
There are in fact 8 text boxes (plus the new 4 classical music text boxes, if Genre is classical or opera) at the top of the main CD Ripper window and the Compilation tick box.
Don't forget, there is also the Review Metadata window and the Tags panel in CD Ripper, for editing/adding tags.
I don't understand here. What else would you put in the Composer text box, if not the Composer(s)?Comment
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Re: Set-Up for Ripping
I don't really understand your question. A "tag" is simply a few bits of data attached to a digital music file. This "tag" contains metadata. This metadata is represented by "fields". There are lots of fields. For example ARTIST is a field, containing the name of the artist for the track. COMPOSER is a field, containing the name of the composer of the track. On any field, it might be automatically filled in from online databases that dbpa uses or one may always manually type in the content they want in that field. In your example, "Beethoven" might automatically be in the COMPOSER field or you might have to type it in.Comment
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Re: Set-Up for Ripping
If so, what was the result outside an Apple environment, please?Last edited by Oggy; November 07, 2017, 07:36 PM.Comment
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Re: Set-Up for Ripping
Thanks, mville, garym, oggy, your last post are helpful in cutting through the misunderstandings.
I think I see that the problem has not been one of failure to understand the concepts; rather it is one of the ambiguous definition of terms. Specifically, I have thought in terms of "tag-groups" and "tags" whereas others have been using the terms "fields" and "tags." (I think garym made this clear.) If I am not mistaken, the word "field" (what I have called "tag-group") is the tag category name that is beside the text boxes at the top of the main page; we have both used "tag" to refer to what it typed into the box. Therefore, there are a limited number of "fields" (8 or 12 to be exact), and an unlimited number of "tags." This is the point I emphasized in the Overview I wrote, only I used the terms "tag-groups" and "tags" instead. (note when I counted the tag-groups I did not include the "comment" field/tag-group.)
I'm sorry if my use of different terminology caused a problem. In fact, my second motivation in sharing the Overview was to move toward the definition and standardization of terminology. I was hung on my own petard. I don't know if there is, indeed, a standard, agreed-upon term for what garym has called "field" and what I have called "tag-group." Before I chose "tag-group" I considered any number of other terms including "dimension" to mean" tag-group" or in garym's terminology, "field." Along with dimension one could use the form "value" (of the dimension) to refer to tag, but I think the term tag is too useful and well-entrenched to change. While there seemed to be no generic term for tag category names (composer, artist, etc.) I chose to keep "tag" and use "tag-group" for tag category. At the end of the day, such a standard agreed-upon term is needed. Whether it is "field" or "tag-group" or something else doesn't really matter.
Once the terminology is standardized what I've written in the Overview is my attempt to explain to a beginner (me) the fundamental variables and relationships inherent in dbpa which are common to all, and which in no way constrains the personal variability that various users bring to their music. I believe that knowing such fundamentals right up front can speed the process of learning/using dbpa immensely because it get everyone on the same page.
If one goes through the Overview and substitutes "field" (or whatever the term should be) for "tag-group" then I think the problem that some have found with the Overview may vanish.
Further, there seems to be a tendency to use the word "tag" loosely to mean what garym calls "field," and what I have called "tag-group." Just today, in fact, evasv has posted (*172) "As I see it: Composer is a tag and Beethoven is a value." This view is the reverse of the perspective held by garym and mville and me. The truth is, I think, that for lack of a clear definition there are lots of users with different points of view. It matters not at all who's "right" or "wrong"; all that matters is that we all get on the same page.
Perhaps I've missed it but I've never seen any official term relating to these 8 to 12 categories. Does anyone know of such? Much confusion can be eliminated by establishing one.
To my way of thinking, "tag" is a word (or words) assigned to a CD or piece or music by the user, and therefore tag is the words he writes in the text box, while the tag category (or field, or tag-group, or dimension, or whatever the term is) is the name shown on the dbpa main screen for the 8 or 12 text boxes; these names constitute a fixed group and they are properties of the dbpa software. I think the main point is that there seems to be no accepted term to use for this collection of 8 or 12 categories (genre, year, disc, comment, album artist, album, artist, composer, work, movement number, movement count, movement name). Should it be field, or tag-group, or dimension, or what?
I have one other question at this point. Mville, you wrote: " Don't forget, there is also the Review Metadata window and the Tags panel in CD Ripper, for editing/adding tags." I don't see any reference to Review Metadata Window, or to Tags panel on the dbpa page; were are these?Comment
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Re: Set-Up for Ripping
Thanks, mville, garym, oggy, your last post are helpful in cutting through the misunderstandings.
I think I see that the problem has not been one of failure to understand the concepts; rather it is one of the ambiguous definition of terms. Specifically, I have thought in terms of "tag-groups" and "tags" whereas others have been using the terms "fields" and "tags." (I think garym made this clear.) If I am not mistaken, the word "field" (what I have called "tag-group") is the tag category name that is beside the text boxes at the top of the main page; we have both used "tag" to refer to what it typed into the box. Therefore, there are a limited number of "fields" (8 or 12 to be exact), and an unlimited number of "tags." This is the point I emphasized in the Overview I wrote, only I used the terms "tag-groups" and "tags" instead. (note when I counted the tag-groups I did not include the "comment" field/tag-group.)
EDIT: To be fair, we are often sloppy with the use of the term "tag". Folks, including myself, often refer to something like the "ARTIST tag" when it would be more correct to say "the ARTIST field that holds metadata regarding the track artist that is contained in the single VORBIS COMMENT *tag* that is attached to the FLAC file." It's just easier to say "the ARTIST tag" and most people understand what this means.
EDIT2: It is in fact standard to call things "fields" inside a tag. See for example,
If one is talking about a FLAC file, COMPOSER is a *field" contained inside a "vorbis comment" tag (and each digital track file has a single Vorbis Comment tag attached to it. That single tag can have dozens of fields. "Beethoven" is the word you enter into that COMPOSER field (that is one field among many inside the single VORBIS COMMENT tag).
I'll read the rest of your note, but right off the bat, I wanted to let you know that there is still some confusion on your part. Have you googled for info on tags? Like this:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vorbis_comment
Last edited by garym; November 07, 2017, 11:28 PM.Comment
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Re: Set-Up for Ripping
I have one other question at this point. Mville, you wrote: " Don't forget, there is also the Review Metadata window and the Tags panel in CD Ripper, for editing/adding tags." I don't see any reference to Review Metadata Window, or to Tags panel on the dbpa page; were are these?
Comment
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Re: Set-Up for Ripping
I think I see that the problem has not been one of failure to understand the concepts; rather it is one of the ambiguous definition of terms. Specifically, I have thought in terms of "tag-groups" and "tags" whereas others have been using the terms "fields" and "tags." (I think garym made this clear.) If I am not mistaken, the word "field" (what I have called "tag-group") is the tag category name that is beside the text boxes at the top of the main page; we have both used "tag" to refer to what it typed into the box. Therefore, there are a limited number of "fields" (8 or 12 to be exact), and an unlimited number of "tags." This is the point I emphasized in the Overview I wrote, only I used the terms "tag-groups" and "tags" instead. (note when I counted the tag-groups I did not include the "comment" field/tag-group.)
So, the idea of a limited number of "fields" (8 or 12 to be exact), and an unlimited number of "tags.", is not correct.Comment
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Re: Set-Up for Ripping
I have one other question at this point. Mville, you wrote: " Don't forget, there is also the Review Metadata window and the Tags panel in CD Ripper, for editing/adding tags." I don't see any reference to Review Metadata Window, or to Tags panel on the dbpa page; were are these?Comment
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Re: Set-Up for Ripping
To some extent this all turns into a philosophical discussion of "how many angels can dance on the head of a pin". 99.9% of digital music users want to have files that are usable. This typically means that the files contain some sort of useful metadata that their audio libraries/players can access. I personally want to have ALBUM, ARTIST, TRACK, TRACK NUMBER, DISK NUMBER, GENRE, COMPOSER, YEAR, COMPILATION, ALBUM ARTIST and maybe a couple of other tag fields. I'm most happy when the databases dbpa accesses automatically obtains this info, but if not, I'll enter it manually. But I set all this up years ago as part of my ripping/tagging process and never gave it much thought afterwards.* Maybe I'm just too simple minded, but I don't see the need for the theoretical underpinnings of tagging as a philosophical exercise.
*with the exception that I'm always rethinking GENRE and ALBUM ARTIST and use of multi-values for certain fields.Comment
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Re: Set-Up for Ripping
Perhaps I've missed it but I've never seen any official term relating to these 8 to 12 categories. Does anyone know of such? Much confusion can be eliminated by establishing one.
To my way of thinking, "tag" is a word (or words) assigned to a CD or piece or music by the user, and therefore tag is the words he writes in the text box, while the tag category (or field, or tag-group, or dimension, or whatever the term is) is the name shown on the dbpa main screen for the 8 or 12 text boxes; these names constitute a fixed group and they are properties of the dbpa software. I think the main point is that there seems to be no accepted term to use for this collection of 8 or 12 categories (genre, year, disc, comment, album artist, album, artist, composer, work, movement number, movement count, movement name). Should it be field, or tag-group, or dimension, or what?Comment
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