More > JRiver Media Center 21 for Mac
Export playlist as folder of music files
RitchieDalto:
--- Quote from: blgentry on May 11, 2016, 07:33:09 am ---There are several methods you could use.
1. Rename, Move, and Copy files. Select the files in your playlist, then Library Tools > Rename, Move, and Copy.
CAUTION CAUTION CAUTION: This is a very powerful tool. It defaults to RENAME mode and will move your files unless you select COPY mode. Be careful
The dialog that appears has a lot of options. You'd want to set it to "copy" mode, and then check Directory, and specify the directory you want the files copied to. I would uncheck the other sections (filename, find & replace).
This method is simple, but it might not be what you want because it will just copy the files. It won't recreate the directory structure, so you file names might not have enough info for you to sort or search your files the way you want to. Presumably you want to do this so you can copy the files to an external media player, or play them on another computer via a thumb drive or something. Which brings us to #2.
2. Handheld Sync. MC includes a pretty nicely thought out system for syncing files with handheld players. This includes simply copying the files to a directory that you specify. Here's the wiki on it:
https://wiki.jriver.com/index.php/Sync_Handheld
Handheld Sync let's you check off playlists and those playlists are synced to the directory you tell it. Later, if the playlist changes, you can sync again, and the changes are synced as well. Handheld sync also includes a file conversion option, so you can convert files to MP3, AAC, or other lossy formats during the sync process. This is optional, and useful for some people.
By default, Handheld Sync creates Artist and Album folders, so it's easy to identify which songs are which, based on the directory structure; which is logical. It also copies the actual playlists into playlist files (M3U or variants) so that handheld players can use these playlists to play the files.
Handheld sync takes a bit of setup time and some getting used to. But it's a really nice tool that might do exactly the job you are looking for.
Brian.
--- End quote ---
I feel like the above methods are not answering the original question, and/or my my question which is the same or closely related: I want to sync with a device my playlists and have the files organized into folders named the same name as the playlist. Under that if they are flat or by artist/titles/etc... I don't care.
If I can't sync a playlist to a playlist folder on my device, then I have to re-create and maintain playlists on my device.
blgentry:
--- Quote from: RitchieDalto on July 09, 2017, 08:25:10 am ---If I can't sync a playlist to a playlist folder on my device, then I have to re-create and maintain playlists on my device.
--- End quote ---
The Handheld Sync tool can be used to sync playlists to an external device, but not exactly as you are asking for. What it does is this:
1. Copy the selected playlists to a folder on the device. These are text playlists in one of a few formats (m3u, etc). Just the playlist files.
2. Copy every song in every playlist to a directory structure. This defaults to something like [Artist]/[Album]/[Filename] .
In this way, you get all of your songs and all of your playlists. The playlists will reference the directory structure that was created. So, as long as your external device can read the playlists, you should be all set. Try it with a small playlist and see how it works for you.
Brian.
RitchieDalto:
OK I think I see the logic in that, seems it would eliminate duplication of files should a track exist in more than one playlist. It does indeed work well for my handheld device. On another shared network asset (my router can be a dlna server, it's storage is a share on my network) reading of playlists seems to not work or be implemented. Ug.
Thank you though, I am starting to "get" how JRiver works I think.
Fitzcookie:
I have a Moto G5 plus that syncs with jriver but I cannot discover what directory it is putting the music in.
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