| Class | ID3Lib::Tag |
| In: |
lib/id3lib.rb
|
| Parent: | Array |
This class is the main frontend of the library. Use it to read and write ID3 tag data of files.
tag = ID3Lib::Tag.new('shy_boy.mp3')
# Remove comments
tag.delete_if{ |frame| frame[:id] == :COMM }
# Set year
tag.year #=> 2000
tag.year = 2005
# Apply changes
tag.update!
You can use a ID3Lib::Tag object like an array. In fact, it is a subclass of Array. An ID3Lib::Tag contains frames which are stored as hashes, with field IDs as keys and field values as values. The frame IDs like TIT2 are the ones specified by the ID3 standard. If you don‘t know these IDs, you probably want to use the accessor methods described afterwards, which have a more natural naming.
tag.each do |frame|
p frame
end
#=> {:id => :TIT2, :text => "Shy Boy", :textenc => 0}
#=> {:id => :TPE1, :text => "Katie Melua", :textenc => 0}
#=> {:id => :TALB, :text => "Piece By Piece", :textenc => 0}
#=> {:id => :TRCK, :text => "1/12", :textenc => 0}
#=> {:id => :TYER, :text => "2005", :textenc => 0}
#=> {:id => :TCON, :text => "Jazz/Blues", :textenc => 0}
There are a number of accessors for text frames like title, performer, album, track, year, comment and genre. Have a look at ID3Lib::Accessors for a complete list.
tag.title #=> "Shy Boi" tag.title = 'Shy Boy' tag.title #=> "Shy Boy" tag.track #=> [1,12] tag.year #=> 2005
You can always read and write the raw text if you want. You just have to use the "manual access". It is generally encouraged to use the frame_text method where possible, because the other two result in an exception when the frame isn‘t found.
tag.frame_text(:TRCK) #=> "1/12"
tag.frame_text(:TLAN) #=> nil
tag.frame(:TRCK)[:text] #=> "1/12"
# Raises an exception, because nil[:text] isn't possible:
tag.frame(:TLAN)[:text]
tag.find{ |f| f[:id] == :TRCK }[:text] #=> "1/12"
# Also raises an exception:
tag.find{ |f| f[:id] == :TLAN }[:text]
Because only text frames can be set with accessors, you have to add special frames by hand.
# Add two comments
tag << {:id => :COMM, :text => 'chunky bacon'}
tag << {:id => :COMM, :text => 'really.'}
# Add an attached picture
cover = {
:id => :APIC,
:mimetype => 'image/jpeg',
:picturetype => 3,
:description => 'A pretty picture',
:textenc => 0,
:data => File.read('cover.jpg')
}
tag << cover
In the last example we added an APIC frame. How can we know what data we have to store in the APIC hash?
ID3Lib::Info.frame(:APIC)[3] #=> [:textenc, :mimetype, :picturetype, :description, :data]
We see, the last element of the info array obtained through ID3Lib::Info.frame is an array of field IDs needed by APIC.
Have a look at the ID3Lib::Info module for detailed information.
When you‘ve finished modifying a tag, don‘t forget to call update! to write the modifications back to the file. You have to check the return value of update!, it returns nil on failure. This probably means that the file is not writeable or cannot be created.
tag.update!
Use the strip! method to completely remove a tag from a file.
tag.strip!
| padding | [RW] |
Create a new Tag. When a filename is supplied, the tag of the file is read. tagtype specifies the tag type to read and defaults to V_ALL. Use one of ID3Lib::V1, ID3Lib::V2, ID3Lib::V_BOTH or ID3Lib::V_ALL.
tag = ID3Lib::Tag.new('shy_boy.mp3')
Only read ID3v1 tag:
id3v1_tag = ID3Lib::Tag.new('piece_by_piece.mp3', ID3Lib::V1)
# File lib/id3lib.rb, line 162
162: def initialize(filename, readtype=V_ALL)
163: @filename = filename
164: @readtype = readtype
165: @padding = true
166:
167: @tag = API::Tag.new
168: @tag.link(@filename, @readtype)
169: read_frames
170: end
Get the text of a frame specified by id. Returns nil if the frame can‘t be found.
tag.find{ |f| f[:id] == :TIT2 }[:text] #=> "Shy Boy"
tag.frame_text(:TIT2) #=> "Shy Boy"
tag.find{ |f| f[:id] == :TLAN } #=> nil
tag.frame_text(:TLAN) #=> nil
# File lib/id3lib.rb, line 204
204: def frame_text(id)
205: f = frame(id)
206: f ? f[:text] : nil
207: end
Check if there is a tag of type type.
# File lib/id3lib.rb, line 282
282: def has_tag?(type=V2)
283: @tag.link(@filename, V_ALL)
284: @tag.has_tag_type(type)
285: end
Returns an Array of invalid frames and fields. If a frame ID is invalid, it alone is in the resulting array. If a frame ID is valid but has invalid fields, the frame ID and the invalid field IDs are included.
tag.invalid_frames #=> [ [:TITS], [:TALB, :invalid] ]
# File lib/id3lib.rb, line 296
296: def invalid_frames
297: invalid = []
298: each do |frame|
299: if not info = Info.frame(frame[:id])
300: # Frame ID doesn't exist.
301: invalid << [frame[:id]]
302: next
303: end
304: # Frame ID is ok, but are all fields ok?
305: invalid_fields = frame.keys.reject { |id|
306: info[FIELDS].include?(id) or id == :id
307: }
308: if not invalid_fields.empty?
309: invalid << [frame[:id], *invalid_fields]
310: end
311: end
312: invalid.empty? ? nil : invalid
313: end
Remove all frames with the specified id.
# File lib/id3lib.rb, line 225
225: def remove_frame(id)
226: delete_if{ |f| f[:id] == id }
227: end
Set the text of a frame. First, all frames with the specified id are deleted and then a new frame with text is appended.
tag.set_frame_text(:TLAN, 'eng')
# File lib/id3lib.rb, line 215
215: def set_frame_text(id, text)
216: remove_frame(id)
217: if text
218: self << { :id => id, :text => text.to_s }
219: end
220: end
Returns an estimate of the number of bytes required to store the tag data.
# File lib/id3lib.rb, line 176
176: def size
177: @tag.size
178: end
Strip tag from file. This is dangerous because you lose all tag information. Specify striptag to only strip a certain tag type. You don‘t have to call update! after strip!.
tag.strip! another_tag.strip!(ID3Lib::V1)
# File lib/id3lib.rb, line 271
271: def strip!(striptype=V_ALL)
272: clear
273: tags = @tag.strip(striptype)
274: @tag.clear
275: @tag.link(@filename, @readtype)
276: tags
277: end
Updates the tag. This change can‘t be undone. writetype specifies which tag type to write and defaults to readtype (see new).
Invalid frames or frame data is ignored. Use invalid_frames before update! if you want to know if you have invalid data.
Returns a number corresponding to the written tag type(s) or nil if the update failed.
tag.update! id3v1_tag.update!(ID3Lib::V1)
# File lib/id3lib.rb, line 242
242: def update!(writetype=@readtype)
243: @tag.strip(writetype)
244: # The following two lines are necessary because of the weird
245: # behaviour of id3lib.
246: @tag.clear
247: @tag.link(@filename, writetype)
248:
249: delete_if do |frame|
250: frame_info = Info.frame(frame[:id])
251: next true if not frame_info
252: libframe = API::Frame.new(frame_info[NUM])
253: Frame.write(frame, libframe)
254: @tag.add_frame(libframe)
255: false
256: end
257:
258: @tag.set_padding(@padding)
259: tags = @tag.update(writetype)
260: return tags == 0 ? nil : tags
261: end