Quod Libet (software)
| Quod Libet | |
|---|---|
| File:Quodlibet logo.svg | |
| File:Quodlibet 3.0.png Screenshot of Quod Libet's paned main browser window (dark theme). | |
| Developer | Quod Libet Team[1] |
| Initial release | 30 October 2004[2] |
| Stable release | 4.5.0 wikidata:Q1621193 (March 2022) [±] |
| Repository | github |
| Written in | Python (PyGObject) |
| Engine | |
| Operating system | Windows, macOS, Linux |
| Size |
|
| Type | Audio player |
| License | GPL-2.0-or-later[3] |
| Website | quodlibet |
Quod Libet is a cross-platform free and open-source audio player, tag editor and library organizer. The main design philosophy is that the user knows how they want to organize their music best; the software is therefore built to be fully customizable and extensible using regular expressions and boolean logic. Quod Libet is based on GTK and written in Python, and uses the Mutagen tagging library.
Quod Libet is very scalable, able to handle libraries with tens of thousands of songs. It provides a full feature set including support for Unicode, regular expression searching, key bindings to multimedia keys, fast but powerful tag editing, and a variety of plugins.
Quod Libet is available on most Linux distributions, macOS and Windows, requiring only PyGObject, Python, and an Open Sound System (OSS), ALSA or JACK compatible audio device. The XFCE desktop ISO image provided by the Debian project installs Quod Libet as the default audio player.[4]
Quod Libet's tag-editing and library organization features are also available through a standalone program, Ex Falso, which is based on the same code and libraries as Quod Libet.
Features
[edit | edit source]Audio playback
[edit | edit source]- Can deal with various audio back-ends via the plug-in architecture of GStreamer
- Supports ReplayGain with smart selection based on either a single track or full album, based on the current view and play order
- 'Real' shuffle mode- entire playlist played before repeating
- Ratings weighted random playback setting
- Configurable play queue
Tag editing
[edit | edit source]- Complete Unicode support
- Changes to multiple files at once, even if files are in different formats
- Ability to tag files based on filenames with fully configurable formats
- Customizable renaming of files based on their tags and a user-supplied format
- Human readable tag references, e.g.
<artist>or<title>rather than%aor%t, with support for "if not-null x else y" logic (e.g.<albumartist|albumartist|artist>) - Fast track renumbering
- Add / edit bookmarks within files
Audio library
[edit | edit source]- Audio Feeds / Podcast support
- Authenticated SoundCloud support
- Can save play counts
- Can download and save lyrics
- Fast refreshing of the entire library based on changed files
- Internet Radio / SHOUTcast support
- Configurable song rating
User interface
[edit | edit source]- Configurable interface to suit user preferences; Pango markup is used so that the user can display tags in any way desired in the player
- Launch additional "browsers" to keep different or multiple views on the library
- Drag-n-drop support throughout the interface.
- Tray icon with full player control
- Automatically recognize and display tags from many uncommon tags
- Customisable Aggregation across albums or playlists (min, max, average, sum, Bayesian average)
- Multiple ways to browse the library:
- Progressive search - the library is filtered as searches are typed
- Queries support boolean logic, numerical / date-based expressions, regular expressions, and synthetic tags, that are derived internally (e.g. play count, rating, inclusion in a playlist).
- Playlists with integration throughout the player
- Paned browser, using any fully customizable tags (e.g. genre, date, album artist...), allowing the user to [drill down] through their library as they prefer
- View by album list with cover art
- View by file-system directory, which includes songs not in your library
File formats
[edit | edit source]Include MP3, Ogg Vorbis, Opus, FLAC, ALAC, Musepack, MOD/XM/IT, WMA, Wavpack, MPEG-4 AAC
Unix-like control and query mechanisms
[edit | edit source]- Status information is available from the command line[5]
- Control of the player using a named pipe (FIFO) is possible[6]
- Text-based files available with current song information
Plugins
[edit | edit source]Quod Libet is currently bundled with over 80 Python-based plugins, including:
- Automatic tagging via MusicBrainz and CDDB
- Download and preview album art from a variety of online sources
- On-screen display pop-ups
- Last.fm/AudioScrobbler submission
- Tag character encoding conversion
- Intelligent title-casing of tags
- Finding duplicate or near-duplicate songs across the entire library
- Scan and save Replay Gain values across multiple albums at once (using GStreamer)
- D-Bus-based Multimedia Shortcut Keys
- Integrate with Sonos systems and Logitech Squeezebox
- Export playlists to common formats (PLS, M3U, XSPF)
- Publish to MQTT queues
See also
[edit | edit source]Lua error in mw.title.lua at line 392: bad argument #2 to 'title.new' (unrecognized namespace name 'Portal').
References
[edit | edit source]- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
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- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
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- ^ Lua error in Module:Citation/CS1/Configuration at line 2172: attempt to index field '?' (a nil value).
External links
[edit | edit source]- 2004 software
- Applications using D-Bus
- Audio software with JACK support
- Audio player software that uses GTK
- Cross-platform free software
- Free audio software
- Free media players
- Free software programmed in Python
- Linux media players
- MacOS multimedia software
- Software that uses PyGObject
- Tag editors for Linux
- Windows multimedia software
- Tag editors that use GTK
- Tag editors
- GNOME Applications