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Beyond MusicBee / Re: HOW TO COMPLETE PLAYLISTS/COLLECTIONS?
« on: May 04, 2024, 12:49:36 PM »p.s. why subject is in russian, and body is in english?![]()
Thank you for your comment. Corrected
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p.s. why subject is in russian, and body is in english?![]()
Previously, I copied the name of the artist and album into a text file, and then, before downloading, I opened a search in this file. But then you had to search in the text file and also in MusicBee. This is 2 actions. I would like to make it simpler: so that you only need to check it in MusicBee once.Hmm. Why do you also have to check in MusicBee?
The separate list will only include things that are definitely not in MusicBee any more because you already deleted them.![]()
If you delete the files in Windows Explorer (not MB), don't the deleted songs remain in the playlist with a ! indicator that says the referenced file cannot be found?
The ideal option would be if you could create a “Deleted” playlist, add albums there and delete them from the HDD. But unfortunately, after deletion they disappear from the playlist[It's odd that I've had to explain this about half a dozen times over the past month or so.]
A playlist is nothing more than a text file. It only contains the path to the music file referenced. It does not contain any music files. It is text only.
When you delete the music file, the playlist updates by removing the path (text) pointing to that file.
I don't think it should be MusicBee's responsibility to record details of tracks or albums that have been explicitly deleted.
That feels... wrong.The ideal option would be if you could create a “Deleted” playlist, add albums there and delete them from the HDD. But unfortunately, after deletion they disappear from the playlist
You could do more or less the same thing with the Send to > Clipboard command.
Copy the tags you want to record for deleted albums (Artist, Album, Year etc.) and then paste them into a separate file.
An Excel/Google worksheet might be helpful because you could easily sort it by Artist name to make it easy to check against later.
You now need to install it yourself. (e.g. look here)
You could convert the albums that you don't want to listen to anymore (but still want to have in your library as a reference) to low quality OPUS files.
How will this help me? I meant the local method, without using third-party services other than Music BeeYou asked if someone had another way of recording what they've listened to. I am someone, and I responded with the way I record what I've listened to.
You had a local method, but said you were too lazy to use it.
This will help you by providing an automated method.
You might also consider not deleting files you may want to listen to and evaluate again in the future.
Hope this helps.
Or maybe someone has another way of recording what they listened to?Last.fm