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MusicBrainz Picard is a free and open-source software application for identifying, tagging, and organising digital audio recordings. [21] Picard identifies audio files and compact discs by comparing either their metadata or their acoustic fingerprints with records in the database. [21]
In computer programming, a naming convention is a set of rules for choosing the character sequence to be used for identifiers which denote variables, types, functions, and other entities in source code and documentation. Reasons for using a naming convention (as opposed to allowing programmers to choose any character sequence) include the ...
Editing Vorbis comment in MusicBrainz Picard. A Vorbis comment is a metadata container used in the Ogg file format (with Vorbis, FLAC, Theora, Speex and Opus codecs). [1] It allows information such as the title, artist, album, track number or other information about the file to be added to the file itself.
Each skin has its own name as a class in the body element. These classes allow skin-specific print rules to be easily applied. Skin name is lowercase: skin-monobook, skin-modern etc. /includes/Skin.php: sortable Related to sortable tables — wikibits.js: sortarrow Related to sortable tables — wikibits.js: sortbottom Related to sortable ...
The name "cue sheet" originates from the "send cue sheet" SCSI/ATA command in optical disc authoring. [1] The specification for that command defines a cue sheet format containing mostly the same information, but in a tabular, binary data structure, rather than a text file.
Articles about singles should preferably link to the MusicBrainz page about the song in addition to the single. To link to a song/composition (not the recording), use {{MusicBrainz work}}.
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