Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
116 lines (90 loc) · 5.81 KB

NamingTemplates.md

File metadata and controls

116 lines (90 loc) · 5.81 KB

Naming Templates

File and Folder names can be customized using Libation's built-in tag template naming engine. To edit how folder and file names are created, go to Settings > Download/Decrypt and edit the naming templates. If you're splitting your audiobook into multiple files by chapter, you can also use a custom template to set each chapter's title metadata tag by editing the template in Settings > Audio File Options.

These templates apply to both GUI and CLI.

Table of Contents

Template Tags

These are the naming template tags currently supported by Libation.

Property Tags

These tags will be replaced in the template with the audiobook's values.

Tag Description Type
<id> Audible book ID (ASIN) Text
<title> Full title Text
<title short> Title. Stop at first colon Text
<author> Author(s) Name List
<first author> First author Text
<narrator> Narrator(s) Name List
<first narrator> First narrator Text
<series> Name of series Text
<series#> Number order in series Text
<bitrate> File's original bitrate (Kbps) Integer
<samplerate> File's original audio sample rate Integer
<channels> Number of audio channels Integer
<account> Audible account of this book Text
<locale> Region/country Text
<year> Year published Integer
<language> Book's language Text
<language short> Book's language abbreviated. Eg: ENG Text
<file date> File creation date/time. DateTime
<pub date> Audiobook publication date DateTime
<date added> Date the book added to your Audible account DateTime
<ch count> Number of chapters Integer
<ch title> Chapter title Text
<ch#> Chapter number Integer
<ch# 0> Chapter number with leading zeros Integer

Does not support custom formatting

Only valid for Chapter Filename and Chapter Tile Metadata

To change how these properties are displayed, read about custom formatters

Conditional Tags

Anything between the opening tag (<tagname->) and closing tag (<-tagname>) will only appear in the name if the condition evaluates to true.

Tag Description Type
<if series->...<-if series> Only include if part of a book series or podcast Conditional
<if podcast->...<-if podcast> Only include if part of a podcast Conditional
<if bookseries->...<-if bookseries> Only include if part of a book series Conditional

For example, <if podcast-><series><-if podcast> will evaluate to the podcast's series name if the file is a podcast. For audiobooks that are not podcasts, that tag will be blank.

You can invert the condition (instead of displaying the text when the condition is true, display the text when it is false) by playing a '!' symbol before the opening tag name.

As an example, this folder template will place all Liberated podcasts into a "Podcasts" folder and all liberated books (not podcasts) into a "Books" folder.

<if podcast->Podcasts<-if podcast><!if podcast->Books<-if podcast>\<title>

Tag Formatters

Text, Name List, Integer, and DateTime tags can be optionally formatted using format text in square brackets after the tag name. Below is a list of supported formatters for each tag type.

Text Formatters

Formatter Description Example Usage Example Result
L Converts text to lowercase <title[L]> a study in scarlet꞉ a sherlock holmes novel
U Converts text to uppercase <title short[U]> A STUDY IN SCARLET

Name List Formatters

Formatter Description Example Usage Example Result
separator() Speficy the text used to join multiple people's names.

Default is ", "
<author[separator(; )]> Arthur Conan Doyle; Stephen Fry
format({T | F | M | L | S}) Formats the human name using the name part tags.
{T} = Title (e.g. "Dr.")
{F} = First name
{M} = Middle name
{L} = Last Name
{S} = Suffix (e.g. "PhD")

Default is {P} {F} {M} {L} {S}
<author[format({L}, {F}) separator(; )]> Doyle, Arthur; Fry, Stephen
sort(F | M | L) Sorts the names by first, middle, or last name

Default is unsorted
<author[sort(M)]> Stephen Fry, Arthur Conan Doyle
max(#) Only use the first # of names

Default is all names
<author[max(1)]> Arthur Conan Doyle

Integer Formatters

Formatter Description Example Usage Example Result
# (a number) Zero-pads the number <bitrate[4]>
<series#[3]>
<samplerate[6]>
0128
001
044100

Date Formatters

Form more standard formatters, see this guide from Microsoft.

Standard DateTime Formatters

Formatter Description Example Usage Example Result
s Sortable date/time pattern. <file date[s]> 2023-02-14T13:45:30
Y Year month pattern. <file date[Y]> February 2023

Custom DateTime Formatters

You can use custom formatters to construct customized DateTime string. For more custom formatters and examples, see this guide from Microsoft.

Formatter Description Example Usage Example Result
yyyy 4-digit year <file date[yyyy]> 2023
yy 2-digit year <file date[yy]> 23
MM 2-digit month <file date[MM]> 02
dd 2-digit day of the month <file date[yyyy-MM-dd]> 2023-02-14
HH
mm
The hour, using a 24-hour clock from 00 to 23
The minute, from 00 through 59.
<file date[HH:mm]> 14:45