mp3 to cda format
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Common Data Format 3.1
Common Data Format is a self-describing data abstraction for the storage and manipulation of multidimensional data. more>>
Common Data Format is a self-describing data abstraction for the storage and manipulation of multidimensional data in a platform- and discipline-independent fashion.
It consists of a scientific data management package (known as the "CDF Library") that allows programmers and application developers to manage and manipulate scalar, vector, and multi-dimensional data arrays.
Enhancements:
- Adds new sets of APIs to allow Standard Interface to interact with zVariables and other CDF-related information.
- Adds MingW and FreeBSD ports.
- Adds support for Intel C++ and Fortran for Linux.
- Adds the ability to create legacy CDF 2.7 files.
- Fixes a bug that prevented directories from having .cdf or .skt extensions.
<<lessIt consists of a scientific data management package (known as the "CDF Library") that allows programmers and application developers to manage and manipulate scalar, vector, and multi-dimensional data arrays.
Enhancements:
- Adds new sets of APIs to allow Standard Interface to interact with zVariables and other CDF-related information.
- Adds MingW and FreeBSD ports.
- Adds support for Intel C++ and Fortran for Linux.
- Adds the ability to create legacy CDF 2.7 files.
- Fixes a bug that prevented directories from having .cdf or .skt extensions.
Download (1.5MB)
Added: 2006-03-13 License: Public Domain Price:
1320 downloads
web mp3 player for xmms 1.0
web mp3 player for xmms is a simple Web MP3 player based on XMMS and XMMS-Shell. more>>
web mp3 player for xmms is a simple Web MP3 player based on XMMS and XMMS-Shell.
The project is useful if you have a Linux server attached to your stereo/home theater and you want to play MP3s easily via a Web interface.
A little playlist support is included. Important note: it is totally insecure, and should only by used in a limited environment.
<<lessThe project is useful if you have a Linux server attached to your stereo/home theater and you want to play MP3s easily via a Web interface.
A little playlist support is included. Important note: it is totally insecure, and should only by used in a limited environment.
Download (0.005MB)
Added: 2007-05-11 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
913 downloads
Mp3tag 1.4
Mp3tag is an Objective-Caml library which can be used in other tools to read, write or graphically edit tags. more>>
Mp3tag is an Objective-Caml library which can be used in other tools to read, write or graphically edit tags (v1 or v2) in mp3 files.
mp3tag library comes with the mp3tag and cddbtag example tools.
The mp3tag tool included can be used to modify tags in mp3 files, or rename files according to tags.
The cddbtag tool included can be used to modify tags in mp3 files, by using a CDDB server to get artist, album and tracks corresponding to the given mp3 files.
The mp3tag tool
The mp3tag tool included can be used to modify tags in mp3 files, or rename files according to tags. Here are some examples of usage:
mp3tag file_1.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Print tags of the given files.
mp3tag -a "Les Cowboys Fringants" -l "Attache ta tuque" *.mp3
Set artist and album tags in all mp3 files of the current directory.
mp3tag -a "Les Cowboys Fringants" -l "Attache ta tuque" -t "Toune dautomne" -n 11 -g 102 file.mp3
Set artist, album, title, track number and genre tags in file.mp3.
mp3tag -e file_1.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Graphically edit tags in each given file.
mp3tag -r file_1.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Rename the given files according to their tags, with the default name format.
mp3tag -r -f 1 file_1.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Rename the given files according to their tags, with the predefined format "1".
mp3tag --formats
Print the list of predefined renaming formats.
mp3tag -F "%n - %t" file_1.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Rename the given files according to their tags with the given format. Here, each file will be renamed as < track number > - < title >.mp3. Where to use values of tags in a format is specified by %a, %t, %l, %n, %g, %c, %y.
mp3tag --copy -t "Le plombier" file1.mp3 file2.mp3
Copy tags from file1.mp3 to file2.mp3, but with a different title tag.
The cddbtag tool
The cddbtag tool included can be used to modify tags in mp3 files, by using a CDDB server to get artist, album and tracks corresponding to the given mp3 files. Here are some examples of usage:
cddbtag file_01.mp3 file_02.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Use the given files, in the given order, to build the discid, then query the CDDB server and, if information could be retrieved, set tags in the given .mp3 files.
cddbtag -t file_01.mp3 file_02.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Same as above but run in test mode: it prints the information retrieved but does not write tags in the files.
cddbtag -s mycddbserver.org -p 4000 file_01.mp3 file_02.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Here we specify a different CDDB server and port to connect to.
<<lessmp3tag library comes with the mp3tag and cddbtag example tools.
The mp3tag tool included can be used to modify tags in mp3 files, or rename files according to tags.
The cddbtag tool included can be used to modify tags in mp3 files, by using a CDDB server to get artist, album and tracks corresponding to the given mp3 files.
The mp3tag tool
The mp3tag tool included can be used to modify tags in mp3 files, or rename files according to tags. Here are some examples of usage:
mp3tag file_1.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Print tags of the given files.
mp3tag -a "Les Cowboys Fringants" -l "Attache ta tuque" *.mp3
Set artist and album tags in all mp3 files of the current directory.
mp3tag -a "Les Cowboys Fringants" -l "Attache ta tuque" -t "Toune dautomne" -n 11 -g 102 file.mp3
Set artist, album, title, track number and genre tags in file.mp3.
mp3tag -e file_1.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Graphically edit tags in each given file.
mp3tag -r file_1.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Rename the given files according to their tags, with the default name format.
mp3tag -r -f 1 file_1.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Rename the given files according to their tags, with the predefined format "1".
mp3tag --formats
Print the list of predefined renaming formats.
mp3tag -F "%n - %t" file_1.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Rename the given files according to their tags with the given format. Here, each file will be renamed as < track number > - < title >.mp3. Where to use values of tags in a format is specified by %a, %t, %l, %n, %g, %c, %y.
mp3tag --copy -t "Le plombier" file1.mp3 file2.mp3
Copy tags from file1.mp3 to file2.mp3, but with a different title tag.
The cddbtag tool
The cddbtag tool included can be used to modify tags in mp3 files, by using a CDDB server to get artist, album and tracks corresponding to the given mp3 files. Here are some examples of usage:
cddbtag file_01.mp3 file_02.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Use the given files, in the given order, to build the discid, then query the CDDB server and, if information could be retrieved, set tags in the given .mp3 files.
cddbtag -t file_01.mp3 file_02.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Same as above but run in test mode: it prints the information retrieved but does not write tags in the files.
cddbtag -s mycddbserver.org -p 4000 file_01.mp3 file_02.mp3 ... file_n.mp3
Here we specify a different CDDB server and port to connect to.
Download (0.048MB)
Added: 2006-03-16 License: LGPL (GNU Lesser General Public License) Price:
9862 downloads
Fortran::Format 0.90
Fortran::Format is a Perl module to read and write data according to a standard Fortran 77 FORMAT. more>>
Fortran::Format is a Perl module to read and write data according to a standard Fortran 77 FORMAT.
SYNOPSYS
use Fortran::Format;
my $f = Fortran::Format->new("2(N: ,I4,2X)");
print $f->write(1 .. 10);
# prints the following:
# N: 1 N: 2
# N: 3 N: 4
# N: 5 N: 6
# N: 7 N: 8
# N: 9 N: 10
# if you dont want to save the format object,
# just chain the calls:
Fortran::Format->new("2(N: ,I4,2X)")->write(1 .. 10);
This is a Perl implementation of the Fortran 77 formatted input/output facility. One possible use is for producing input files for old Fortran programs, making sure that their column-oriented records are rigorously correct. Fortran formats may also have some advantages over printf in some cases: it is very easy to output an array, reusing the format as needed; and the syntax for repeated columns is more concise. Unlike printf, for good or ill, Fortran-formatted fields never exceed their desired width. For example, compare
printf "%3d", 12345; # prints "12345"
print Fortran::Format->new("I3")->write(12345); # prints "***"
This implementation was written in pure Perl, with portability and correctness in mind. It implements the full ANSI standard for Fortran 77 Formats (or at least it should). It was not written with speed in mind, so if you need to process millions of records it may not be what you need.
<<lessSYNOPSYS
use Fortran::Format;
my $f = Fortran::Format->new("2(N: ,I4,2X)");
print $f->write(1 .. 10);
# prints the following:
# N: 1 N: 2
# N: 3 N: 4
# N: 5 N: 6
# N: 7 N: 8
# N: 9 N: 10
# if you dont want to save the format object,
# just chain the calls:
Fortran::Format->new("2(N: ,I4,2X)")->write(1 .. 10);
This is a Perl implementation of the Fortran 77 formatted input/output facility. One possible use is for producing input files for old Fortran programs, making sure that their column-oriented records are rigorously correct. Fortran formats may also have some advantages over printf in some cases: it is very easy to output an array, reusing the format as needed; and the syntax for repeated columns is more concise. Unlike printf, for good or ill, Fortran-formatted fields never exceed their desired width. For example, compare
printf "%3d", 12345; # prints "12345"
print Fortran::Format->new("I3")->write(12345); # prints "***"
This implementation was written in pure Perl, with portability and correctness in mind. It implements the full ANSI standard for Fortran 77 Formats (or at least it should). It was not written with speed in mind, so if you need to process millions of records it may not be what you need.
Download (0.018MB)
Added: 2007-04-20 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
925 downloads
Time::Format 1.02
Time::Format is a Perl module for easy-to-use date/time formatting. more>>
Time::Format is a Perl module for easy-to-use date/time formatting.
SYNOPSIS
use Time::Format qw(%time %strftime %manip);
$time{$format}
$time{$format, $unixtime}
print "Today is $time{yyyy/mm/dd}n";
print "Yesterday was $time{yyyy/mm/dd, time-24*60*60}n";
print "The time is $time{hh:mm:ss}n";
print "Another time is $time{H:mm am tz, $another_time}n";
print "Timestamp: $time{yyyymmdd.hhmmss.mmm}n";
%time also accepts Date::Manip strings and DateTime objects:
$dm = Date::Manip::ParseDate(last monday);
print "Last monday was $time{Month d, yyyy, $dm}";
$dt = DateTime->new (....);
print "Heres another date: $time{m/d/yy, $dt}";
It also accepts most ISO-8601 date/time strings:
$t = 2005/10/31T17:11:09; # date separator: / or - or .
$t = 2005-10-31 17.11.09; # in-between separator: T or _ or space
$t = 20051031_171109; # time separator: : or .
$t = 20051031171109; # separators may be omitted
$t = 2005/10/31; # date-only is okay
$t = 17:11:09; # time-only is okay
# But not:
$t = 20051031; # date-only without separators
$t = 171109; # time-only without separators
# ...because those look like epoch time numbers.
%strftime works like POSIXs strftime, if you like those %-formats.
$strftime{$format}
$strftime{$format, $unixtime}
$strftime{$format, $sec,$min,$hour, $mday,$mon,$year, $wday,$yday,$isdst}
print "POSIXish: $strftime{%A, %B %d, %Y, 0,0,0,12,11,95,2}n";
print "POSIXish: $strftime{%A, %B %d, %Y, 1054866251}n";
print "POSIXish: $strftime{%A, %B %d, %Y}n"; # current time
%manip works like Date::Manips UnixDate function.
$manip{$format};
$manip{$format, $when};
print "Date::Manip: $manip{%m/%d/%Y}n"; # current time
print "Date::Manip: $manip{%m/%d/%Y,last Tuesday}n";
These can also be used as standalone functions:
use Time::Format qw(time_format time_strftime time_manip);
print "Today is ", time_format(yyyy/mm/dd, $some_time), "n";
print "POSIXish: ", time_strftime(%A %B %d, %Y,$some_time), "n";
print "Date::Manip: ", time_manip(%m/%d/%Y,$some_time), "n";
This module creates global pseudovariables which format dates and times, according to formatting codes you pass to them in strings.
The %time formatting codes are designed to be easy to remember and use, and to take up just as many characters as the output time value whenever possible. For example, the four-digit year code is "yyyy", the three-letter month abbreviation is "Mon".
The nice thing about having a variable-like interface instead of function calls is that the values can be used inside of strings (as well as outside of strings in ordinary expressions). Dates are frequently used within strings (log messages, output, data records, etc.), so having the ability to interpolate them directly is handy.
Perl allows arbitrary expressions within curly braces of a hash, even when that hash is being interpolated into a string. This allows you to do computations on the fly while formatting times and inserting them into strings. See the "yesterday" example above.
The format strings are designed with programmers in mind. What do you need most frequently? 4-digit year, month, day, 24-based hour, minute, second -- usually with leading zeroes. These six are the easiest formats to use and remember in Time::Format: yyyy, mm, dd, hh, mm, ss. Variants on these formats follow a simple and consistent formula. This module is for everyone who is weary of trying to remember strftime(3)s arcane codes, or of endlessly writing $t[4]++; $t[5]+=1900 as you manually format times or dates.
Note that mm (and related codes) are used both for months and minutes. This is a feature. %time resolves the ambiguity by examining other nearby formatting codes. If its in the context of a year or a day, "month" is assumed. If in the context of an hour or a second, "minute" is assumed.
The format strings are not meant to encompass every date/time need ever conceived. But how often do you need the day of the year (strftimes %j) or the week number (strftimes %W)?
For capabilities that %time does not provide, %strftime provides an interface to POSIXs strftime, and %manip provides an interface to the Date::Manip modules UnixDate function.
If the companion module Time::Format_XS is also installed, Time::Format will detect and use it. This will result in a significant speed increase for %time and time_format.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use Time::Format qw(%time %strftime %manip);
$time{$format}
$time{$format, $unixtime}
print "Today is $time{yyyy/mm/dd}n";
print "Yesterday was $time{yyyy/mm/dd, time-24*60*60}n";
print "The time is $time{hh:mm:ss}n";
print "Another time is $time{H:mm am tz, $another_time}n";
print "Timestamp: $time{yyyymmdd.hhmmss.mmm}n";
%time also accepts Date::Manip strings and DateTime objects:
$dm = Date::Manip::ParseDate(last monday);
print "Last monday was $time{Month d, yyyy, $dm}";
$dt = DateTime->new (....);
print "Heres another date: $time{m/d/yy, $dt}";
It also accepts most ISO-8601 date/time strings:
$t = 2005/10/31T17:11:09; # date separator: / or - or .
$t = 2005-10-31 17.11.09; # in-between separator: T or _ or space
$t = 20051031_171109; # time separator: : or .
$t = 20051031171109; # separators may be omitted
$t = 2005/10/31; # date-only is okay
$t = 17:11:09; # time-only is okay
# But not:
$t = 20051031; # date-only without separators
$t = 171109; # time-only without separators
# ...because those look like epoch time numbers.
%strftime works like POSIXs strftime, if you like those %-formats.
$strftime{$format}
$strftime{$format, $unixtime}
$strftime{$format, $sec,$min,$hour, $mday,$mon,$year, $wday,$yday,$isdst}
print "POSIXish: $strftime{%A, %B %d, %Y, 0,0,0,12,11,95,2}n";
print "POSIXish: $strftime{%A, %B %d, %Y, 1054866251}n";
print "POSIXish: $strftime{%A, %B %d, %Y}n"; # current time
%manip works like Date::Manips UnixDate function.
$manip{$format};
$manip{$format, $when};
print "Date::Manip: $manip{%m/%d/%Y}n"; # current time
print "Date::Manip: $manip{%m/%d/%Y,last Tuesday}n";
These can also be used as standalone functions:
use Time::Format qw(time_format time_strftime time_manip);
print "Today is ", time_format(yyyy/mm/dd, $some_time), "n";
print "POSIXish: ", time_strftime(%A %B %d, %Y,$some_time), "n";
print "Date::Manip: ", time_manip(%m/%d/%Y,$some_time), "n";
This module creates global pseudovariables which format dates and times, according to formatting codes you pass to them in strings.
The %time formatting codes are designed to be easy to remember and use, and to take up just as many characters as the output time value whenever possible. For example, the four-digit year code is "yyyy", the three-letter month abbreviation is "Mon".
The nice thing about having a variable-like interface instead of function calls is that the values can be used inside of strings (as well as outside of strings in ordinary expressions). Dates are frequently used within strings (log messages, output, data records, etc.), so having the ability to interpolate them directly is handy.
Perl allows arbitrary expressions within curly braces of a hash, even when that hash is being interpolated into a string. This allows you to do computations on the fly while formatting times and inserting them into strings. See the "yesterday" example above.
The format strings are designed with programmers in mind. What do you need most frequently? 4-digit year, month, day, 24-based hour, minute, second -- usually with leading zeroes. These six are the easiest formats to use and remember in Time::Format: yyyy, mm, dd, hh, mm, ss. Variants on these formats follow a simple and consistent formula. This module is for everyone who is weary of trying to remember strftime(3)s arcane codes, or of endlessly writing $t[4]++; $t[5]+=1900 as you manually format times or dates.
Note that mm (and related codes) are used both for months and minutes. This is a feature. %time resolves the ambiguity by examining other nearby formatting codes. If its in the context of a year or a day, "month" is assumed. If in the context of an hour or a second, "minute" is assumed.
The format strings are not meant to encompass every date/time need ever conceived. But how often do you need the day of the year (strftimes %j) or the week number (strftimes %W)?
For capabilities that %time does not provide, %strftime provides an interface to POSIXs strftime, and %manip provides an interface to the Date::Manip modules UnixDate function.
If the companion module Time::Format_XS is also installed, Time::Format will detect and use it. This will result in a significant speed increase for %time and time_format.
Download (0.038MB)
Added: 2007-07-19 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
830 downloads
OODoc::Format::Pod 0.98
OODoc::Format::Pod is a Perl module to produce POD pages from the doc tree. more>>
OODoc::Format::Pod is a Perl module to produce POD pages from the doc tree.
INHERITANCE
OODoc::Format::Pod
is an OODoc::Format
is an OODoc::Object
OODoc::Format::Pod is extended by
OODoc::Format::Pod2
SYNOPSIS
my $doc = OODoc->new(...);
$doc->create
( pod
, format_options => [show_examples => NO]
, append => "extra textn"
);
Create manual pages in the POD syntax. POD is the standard document description syntax for Perl. POD can be translated to many different operating system specific manual systems, like the Unix man system.
<<lessINHERITANCE
OODoc::Format::Pod
is an OODoc::Format
is an OODoc::Object
OODoc::Format::Pod is extended by
OODoc::Format::Pod2
SYNOPSIS
my $doc = OODoc->new(...);
$doc->create
( pod
, format_options => [show_examples => NO]
, append => "extra textn"
);
Create manual pages in the POD syntax. POD is the standard document description syntax for Perl. POD can be translated to many different operating system specific manual systems, like the Unix man system.
Download (0.10MB)
Added: 2007-03-09 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
962 downloads
Test::Reporter::Date::Format 1.27
Test::Reporter::Date::Format Perl module contains date formating subroutines. more>>
Test::Reporter::Date::Format Perl module contains date formating subroutines.
SYNOPSIS
use Test::Reporter::Date::Format;
@lt = localtime(time);
print time2str($template, time);
print strftime($template, @lt);
print time2str($template, time, $zone);
print strftime($template, @lt, $zone);
print ctime(time);
print asctime(@lt);
print ctime(time, $zone);
print asctime(@lt, $zone);
This module provides routines to format dates into ASCII strings. They correspond to the C library routines strftime and ctime.
time2str(TEMPLATE, TIME [, ZONE])
time2str converts TIME into an ASCII string using the conversion specification given in TEMPLATE. ZONE if given specifies the zone which the output is required to be in, ZONE defaults to your current zone.
strftime(TEMPLATE, TIME [, ZONE])
strftime is similar to time2str with the exception that the time is passed as an array, such as the array returned by localtime.
ctime(TIME [, ZONE])
ctime calls time2str with the given arguments using the conversion specification "%a %b %e %T %Yn"
asctime(TIME [, ZONE])
asctime calls time2str with the given arguments using the conversion specification "%a %b %e %T %Yn"
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use Test::Reporter::Date::Format;
@lt = localtime(time);
print time2str($template, time);
print strftime($template, @lt);
print time2str($template, time, $zone);
print strftime($template, @lt, $zone);
print ctime(time);
print asctime(@lt);
print ctime(time, $zone);
print asctime(@lt, $zone);
This module provides routines to format dates into ASCII strings. They correspond to the C library routines strftime and ctime.
time2str(TEMPLATE, TIME [, ZONE])
time2str converts TIME into an ASCII string using the conversion specification given in TEMPLATE. ZONE if given specifies the zone which the output is required to be in, ZONE defaults to your current zone.
strftime(TEMPLATE, TIME [, ZONE])
strftime is similar to time2str with the exception that the time is passed as an array, such as the array returned by localtime.
ctime(TIME [, ZONE])
ctime calls time2str with the given arguments using the conversion specification "%a %b %e %T %Yn"
asctime(TIME [, ZONE])
asctime calls time2str with the given arguments using the conversion specification "%a %b %e %T %Yn"
Download (0.023MB)
Added: 2007-07-24 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
822 downloads
MP3 Database II 2.9
MP3DB2 is a collection of bash scripts for keeping track of large MP3 collections. more>>
MP3DB2 is a collection of bash scripts for keeping track of large MP3 collections. It will retrieve song information from the filenames and ID3 tags of a directory or CD of MP3s and store them in a local database.
This program is a complete rewrite of my MP3 database version 1. Version 1 only stored the data that was present in the filenames while version 2 actually retrieves information from the ID3 tags of each MP3.
Please note that as of this version the database format is NOT considered carved in stone. I have already added a few fields mid-development and this will continue for a while if I think the format can be made better. See the changelog for a list of changes to the database format since V2.0.
Enhancements:
- mp3dupe: now just displays the name of the directory we are checking not the full path in the host filesystem.
<<lessThis program is a complete rewrite of my MP3 database version 1. Version 1 only stored the data that was present in the filenames while version 2 actually retrieves information from the ID3 tags of each MP3.
Please note that as of this version the database format is NOT considered carved in stone. I have already added a few fields mid-development and this will continue for a while if I think the format can be made better. See the changelog for a list of changes to the database format since V2.0.
Enhancements:
- mp3dupe: now just displays the name of the directory we are checking not the full path in the host filesystem.
Download (0.096MB)
Added: 2006-07-26 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1190 downloads
Tie::Formatted 0.02
Tie::Formatted is a Perl module embed sprintf() formatting in regular print(). more>>
Tie::Formatted is a Perl module embed sprintf() formatting in regular print().
SYNOPSIS
use Tie::Formatted;
print "The value is $format{$number, "%3d"} ",
"(or $format{$number, "%04x"} in hex)n";
print "some numbers: $format{ 12, 492, 1, 8753, "%04d"}n";
This module creates a global read-only hash, %format, for formatting data items with standard sprintf format specifications. Since its a hash, you can interpolate it into strings as well as use it standalone.
The hash should be "accessed" with two or more "keys". The last key is interpreted as a sprintf format for each data item specified in the preceeding arguments. This allows you to format multiple items at once using the same format for each.
Alternate name
If you prefer, you can specify a different name for the magical formatting hash by supplying it as as argument when useing the module:
use Tie::Formatted qw(z);
This makes %z the magic hash instead.
print "This is hex: $z{255, "%04x"}n";
Tie::Formatted currently supports only one format in the final argument; this may change if there is demand for it.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use Tie::Formatted;
print "The value is $format{$number, "%3d"} ",
"(or $format{$number, "%04x"} in hex)n";
print "some numbers: $format{ 12, 492, 1, 8753, "%04d"}n";
This module creates a global read-only hash, %format, for formatting data items with standard sprintf format specifications. Since its a hash, you can interpolate it into strings as well as use it standalone.
The hash should be "accessed" with two or more "keys". The last key is interpreted as a sprintf format for each data item specified in the preceeding arguments. This allows you to format multiple items at once using the same format for each.
Alternate name
If you prefer, you can specify a different name for the magical formatting hash by supplying it as as argument when useing the module:
use Tie::Formatted qw(z);
This makes %z the magic hash instead.
print "This is hex: $z{255, "%04x"}n";
Tie::Formatted currently supports only one format in the final argument; this may change if there is demand for it.
Download (0.005MB)
Added: 2007-01-15 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1012 downloads
AnyData::Format::Mp3 0.10
AnyData::Format::Mp3 is a tied hash and DBI access to Mp3 files. more>>
AnyData::Format::Mp3 is a tied hash and DBI access to Mp3 files.
SYNOPSIS
use AnyData;
my $playlist = adTie( Passwd, [c:/My Music/] );
while (my $song = each %$playlist){
print $song->{artist} if $song->{genre} eq Reggae
}
OR
use DBI
my $dbh = DBI->connect(dbi:AnyData:);
$dbh->func(playlist,Mp3,[c:/My Music],ad_catalog);
my $playlist = $dbh->selectall_arrayref( qq{
SELECT artist, title FROM playlist WHERE genre = Reggae
});
# ... other DBI/SQL operations
This module provides a tied hash interface and a DBI/SQL interface to MP files. It creates an in-memory database or hash from the Mp3 files themselves without actually creating a separate database file. This means that the database is automatically updated just by moving files in or out of the directories.
Many mp3 (mpeg three) music files contain a header describing the song name, artist, and other information about the music.
Simply choose Mp3 as the format and give a reference to an array of directories containing mp3 files. Each file in those directories will become a record containing the fields:
song
artist
album
year
genre
filename
filesize
This module is a submodule of the AnyData.pm and DBD::AnyData.pm modules. Refer to their documentation for further details.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use AnyData;
my $playlist = adTie( Passwd, [c:/My Music/] );
while (my $song = each %$playlist){
print $song->{artist} if $song->{genre} eq Reggae
}
OR
use DBI
my $dbh = DBI->connect(dbi:AnyData:);
$dbh->func(playlist,Mp3,[c:/My Music],ad_catalog);
my $playlist = $dbh->selectall_arrayref( qq{
SELECT artist, title FROM playlist WHERE genre = Reggae
});
# ... other DBI/SQL operations
This module provides a tied hash interface and a DBI/SQL interface to MP files. It creates an in-memory database or hash from the Mp3 files themselves without actually creating a separate database file. This means that the database is automatically updated just by moving files in or out of the directories.
Many mp3 (mpeg three) music files contain a header describing the song name, artist, and other information about the music.
Simply choose Mp3 as the format and give a reference to an array of directories containing mp3 files. Each file in those directories will become a record containing the fields:
song
artist
album
year
genre
filename
filesize
This module is a submodule of the AnyData.pm and DBD::AnyData.pm modules. Refer to their documentation for further details.
Download (0.043MB)
Added: 2006-11-07 License: GPL (GNU General Public License) Price:
1081 downloads
DateTime::Format::Pg 0.15
DateTime::Format::Pg is a Perl module to parse and format PostgreSQL dates and times. more>>
DateTime::Format::Pg is a Perl module to parse and format PostgreSQL dates and times.
SYNOPSIS
use DateTime::Format::Pg;
my $dt = DateTime::Format::Pg->parse_datetime( 2003-01-16 23:12:01 );
# 2003-01-16T23:12:01+0200
DateTime::Format::Pg->format_datetime($dt);
This module understands the formats used by PostgreSQL for its DATE, TIME, TIMESTAMP, and INTERVAL data types. It can be used to parse these formats in order to create DateTime or DateTime::Duration objects, and it can take a DateTime or DateTime::Duration object and produce a string representing it in a format accepted by PostgreSQL.
CONSTRUCTORS
The following methods can be used to create DateTime::Format::Pg objects.
new( name => value, ... )
Creates a new DateTime::Format::Pg instance. This is generally not required for simple operations. If you wish to use a different parsing style from the default then it is more comfortable to create an object.
my $parser = DateTime::Format::Pg->new()
my $copy = $parser->new( european => 1 );
This method accepts the following options:
european
If european is set to non-zero, dates are assumed to be in european dd/mm/yyyy format. The default is to assume US mm/dd/yyyy format (because this is the default for PostgreSQL).
This option only has an effect if PostgreSQL is set to output dates in the PostgreSQL (DATE only) and SQL (DATE and TIMESTAMP) styles.
Note that you dont have to set this option if the PostgreSQL server has been set to use the ISO format, which is the default.
server_tz
This option can be set to a DateTime::TimeZone object or a string that contains a time zone name.
This value must be set to the same value as the PostgreSQL servers time zone in order to parse TIMESTAMP WITH TIMEZONE values in the PostgreSQL, SQL, and German formats correctly.
Note that you dont have to set this option if the PostgreSQL server has been set to use the ISO format, which is the default.
clone()
This method is provided for those who prefer to explicitly clone via a method called clone().
my $clone = $original->clone();
If called as a class method it will die.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use DateTime::Format::Pg;
my $dt = DateTime::Format::Pg->parse_datetime( 2003-01-16 23:12:01 );
# 2003-01-16T23:12:01+0200
DateTime::Format::Pg->format_datetime($dt);
This module understands the formats used by PostgreSQL for its DATE, TIME, TIMESTAMP, and INTERVAL data types. It can be used to parse these formats in order to create DateTime or DateTime::Duration objects, and it can take a DateTime or DateTime::Duration object and produce a string representing it in a format accepted by PostgreSQL.
CONSTRUCTORS
The following methods can be used to create DateTime::Format::Pg objects.
new( name => value, ... )
Creates a new DateTime::Format::Pg instance. This is generally not required for simple operations. If you wish to use a different parsing style from the default then it is more comfortable to create an object.
my $parser = DateTime::Format::Pg->new()
my $copy = $parser->new( european => 1 );
This method accepts the following options:
european
If european is set to non-zero, dates are assumed to be in european dd/mm/yyyy format. The default is to assume US mm/dd/yyyy format (because this is the default for PostgreSQL).
This option only has an effect if PostgreSQL is set to output dates in the PostgreSQL (DATE only) and SQL (DATE and TIMESTAMP) styles.
Note that you dont have to set this option if the PostgreSQL server has been set to use the ISO format, which is the default.
server_tz
This option can be set to a DateTime::TimeZone object or a string that contains a time zone name.
This value must be set to the same value as the PostgreSQL servers time zone in order to parse TIMESTAMP WITH TIMEZONE values in the PostgreSQL, SQL, and German formats correctly.
Note that you dont have to set this option if the PostgreSQL server has been set to use the ISO format, which is the default.
clone()
This method is provided for those who prefer to explicitly clone via a method called clone().
my $clone = $original->clone();
If called as a class method it will die.
Download (0.019MB)
Added: 2007-05-17 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
890 downloads
AnyData::Format::XML 0.10
AnyData::Format::XML is a Perl module for tiedhash and DBI access to XML. more>>
AnyData::Format::XML is a Perl module for tiedhash and DBI access to XML.
SYNOPSIS
# access XML data via a multi-dimensional tied hash
# see AnyData.pod for full details
#
use AnyData;
my $table = adTie( XML, $file, $mode, $flags );
OR
# convert data to and from XML
# see AnyData.pod for full details
#
use AnyData;
adConvert( XML, $file1, $any_other_format, $file2, $flags );
adConvert( $any_other_format, $file1, XML, $file2, $flags );
OR
# access the data via DBI and SQL
# see DBD::AnyData.pod for full details
#
use DBI;
my $dbh = DBI->connect( dbi:AnyData );
$dbh->func(mytable,XML,$file,$flags,ad_catalog);
See below for a description of the optional flags that apply to all of these examples.
This module allows you to create, search, modify and/or convert XML data and files by treating them as databases without having to actually create separate database files. The data can be accessed via a multi-dimensional tiedhash using AnyData.pm or via DBI and SQL commands using DBD::AnyData.pm. See those modules for complete details of usage.
The module is built on top of Michel Rodriguezs excellent XML::Twig which means that the AnyData interfaces can now include information from DTDs, be smarter about inferring data structure, reduce memory consumption on huge files, and provide access to many powerful features of XML::Twig and XML::Parser on which it is based.
Importing options allow you to import/access/modify XML of almost any length or complexity. This includes the ability to access different subtrees as separate or joined databases.
Exporting and converting options allow you to take data from almost any source (a perl array, any DBI database, etc.) and output it as an XML file. You can control the formating of the resulting XML either by supplying a DTD listing things like nesting of tags and which columns should be output as attributes and/or you can use XML::Twig pretty_print settings to generate half a dozen different levels of compactness or whitespace in how the XML looks.
The documentaion below outlines the special flags that can be used in either of the interfaces to fine-tune how the XML is treated.
The flags listed below define the relationship between tags and attributes in the XML document and columns in the resulting database. In many cases, you can simply accept the defaults and the database will be built automatically. However, you can also fine tune the generation of the database by specifying which tags and attributes you are interested in and their relationship with database columns.
<<lessSYNOPSIS
# access XML data via a multi-dimensional tied hash
# see AnyData.pod for full details
#
use AnyData;
my $table = adTie( XML, $file, $mode, $flags );
OR
# convert data to and from XML
# see AnyData.pod for full details
#
use AnyData;
adConvert( XML, $file1, $any_other_format, $file2, $flags );
adConvert( $any_other_format, $file1, XML, $file2, $flags );
OR
# access the data via DBI and SQL
# see DBD::AnyData.pod for full details
#
use DBI;
my $dbh = DBI->connect( dbi:AnyData );
$dbh->func(mytable,XML,$file,$flags,ad_catalog);
See below for a description of the optional flags that apply to all of these examples.
This module allows you to create, search, modify and/or convert XML data and files by treating them as databases without having to actually create separate database files. The data can be accessed via a multi-dimensional tiedhash using AnyData.pm or via DBI and SQL commands using DBD::AnyData.pm. See those modules for complete details of usage.
The module is built on top of Michel Rodriguezs excellent XML::Twig which means that the AnyData interfaces can now include information from DTDs, be smarter about inferring data structure, reduce memory consumption on huge files, and provide access to many powerful features of XML::Twig and XML::Parser on which it is based.
Importing options allow you to import/access/modify XML of almost any length or complexity. This includes the ability to access different subtrees as separate or joined databases.
Exporting and converting options allow you to take data from almost any source (a perl array, any DBI database, etc.) and output it as an XML file. You can control the formating of the resulting XML either by supplying a DTD listing things like nesting of tags and which columns should be output as attributes and/or you can use XML::Twig pretty_print settings to generate half a dozen different levels of compactness or whitespace in how the XML looks.
The documentaion below outlines the special flags that can be used in either of the interfaces to fine-tune how the XML is treated.
The flags listed below define the relationship between tags and attributes in the XML document and columns in the resulting database. In many cases, you can simply accept the defaults and the database will be built automatically. However, you can also fine tune the generation of the database by specifying which tags and attributes you are interested in and their relationship with database columns.
Download (0.043MB)
Added: 2006-09-13 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
1137 downloads
mp3 CUE cutter 0.4.0
mp3 CUE cutter cuts MP3 files according to a .cue file. more>>
mp3cue cuts an input MP3 file according to the information stored in a .cue file (for example multiple tracks of DJ mix), and writes the output to multiple MP3 files.
poc is a mp3 and ogg streamer supporting following protocols:
HTTP (mp3 and ogg)
RTP (RFC 2250) (mp3 only)
RTP (RFC 3119) (mp3 only)
homegrown FEC protocol (mp3 only)
It should work under any POSIX platform, and does not require any additional library. You need a C99 compiler though.
poc is still beta software, ipv6 and ogg support was not tested extensively.
poc includes mp3cue, a mp3 CUE cutter, and mp3cut, a mp3 command-line editing tool.
<<lesspoc is a mp3 and ogg streamer supporting following protocols:
HTTP (mp3 and ogg)
RTP (RFC 2250) (mp3 only)
RTP (RFC 3119) (mp3 only)
homegrown FEC protocol (mp3 only)
It should work under any POSIX platform, and does not require any additional library. You need a C99 compiler though.
poc is still beta software, ipv6 and ogg support was not tested extensively.
poc includes mp3cue, a mp3 CUE cutter, and mp3cut, a mp3 command-line editing tool.
Download (0.094MB)
Added: 2005-09-28 License: Freely Distributable Price:
979 downloads
MP3::Tag 0.9709
MP3::Tag is a Perl module for reading tags of MP3 audio files. more>>
MP3::Tag is a Perl module for reading tags of MP3 audio files.
SYNOPSIS
use MP3::Tag;
$mp3 = MP3::Tag->new($filename);
# get some information about the file in the easiest way
($title, $track, $artist, $album, $comment, $year, $genre) = $mp3->autoinfo();
$comment = $mp3->comment();
# or have a closer look on the tags
# scan file for existing tags
$mp3->get_tags;
if (exists $mp3->{ID3v1}) {
# read some information from the tag
$id3v1 = $mp3->{ID3v1}; # $id3v1 is only a shortcut for $mp3->{ID3v1}
print $id3v1->title;
# change the tag contents
$id3v1->all("Song","Artist","Album",2001,"Comment",10,"Top 40");
$id3v1->write_tag;
}
if (exists $mp3->{ID3v2}) {
# read some information from the tag
($name, $info) = $mp3->{ID3v2}->get_frame("TIT2");
# delete the tag completely from the file
$mp3->{ID3v2}->remove_tag;
} else {
# create a new tag
$mp3->new_tag("ID3v2");
$mp3->{ID3v2}->add_frame("TALB", "Album title");
$mp3->{ID3v2}->write_tag;
}
$mp3->close();
<<lessSYNOPSIS
use MP3::Tag;
$mp3 = MP3::Tag->new($filename);
# get some information about the file in the easiest way
($title, $track, $artist, $album, $comment, $year, $genre) = $mp3->autoinfo();
$comment = $mp3->comment();
# or have a closer look on the tags
# scan file for existing tags
$mp3->get_tags;
if (exists $mp3->{ID3v1}) {
# read some information from the tag
$id3v1 = $mp3->{ID3v1}; # $id3v1 is only a shortcut for $mp3->{ID3v1}
print $id3v1->title;
# change the tag contents
$id3v1->all("Song","Artist","Album",2001,"Comment",10,"Top 40");
$id3v1->write_tag;
}
if (exists $mp3->{ID3v2}) {
# read some information from the tag
($name, $info) = $mp3->{ID3v2}->get_frame("TIT2");
# delete the tag completely from the file
$mp3->{ID3v2}->remove_tag;
} else {
# create a new tag
$mp3->new_tag("ID3v2");
$mp3->{ID3v2}->add_frame("TALB", "Album title");
$mp3->{ID3v2}->write_tag;
}
$mp3->close();
Download (0.17MB)
Added: 2007-07-12 License: Perl Artistic License Price:
839 downloads

MP3 Diags 0.99.05.029
MP3 Diags offers you a powerful GUI-based application which lets end-users identify issues with their MP3 files, fix some of the issues and make other changes, like adding track information. more>> <<less
Added: 2009-07-26 License: GPL Price: FREE
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