What do you mean by putting them in a playlist, Rick?
I was suggesting a straw to grasp at for getting around the "DVD;1" problem. I've since realized I actually do have a few of these (not previously imported to MC) that I could experiment with. The playlist idea is clearly a dead end, but I did discover some weird and wonderful things. This is what I did:
1. Imported DVD rips to MC. Noted the magical DVD;1 extension, but
File Type was still IFO. So...
2. Changed extension in MC (which changes actual extension in file system) to IFO. (To be clear, the complete filename in each case is
VIDEO_TS.IFO. I don't understand these things, but I guess the IFO file contains information about the VOB files in the directory.) Selected
Play in PVD, and each played fine in MC—the associated media player. They also, of course, played fine when played directly in MC. So far so good, so...
3. Ran PvdImport. The meta information is
not updated. What? Perhaps the smart-ass MC won't recognize them as valid video files. So...
4. Changed the extensions (in both PVD and MC) to LOG. (Relax—that's the extension I set up for my dummy files. To my MC, they're text files which included in the video view. The effect would be the same if I changed them both to AVI.) You guessed it—now PvdImport works fine.
5. Changed the extensions back to IFO. Now here's the weird part...
6. Changed some information in PVD, and tried importing again. PvdImport now works fine on the IFO files (not new ones, just the ones I did the above to).
So the plugin will handle DVD files, but the workaround is not practical for anyone who has significant numbers of them. Also, there must be a reason why the DVD;1 scheme is used—I have no idea what adverse consequences there might be in not complying with it.
I only have 2 DVDs in my MC library - I copy from MC into an excel spreadsheet and import them into MC that way. At least this way both MC and PVD refer to the DVD movie in the same way.
Okay,
now I understand what you're doing. This is another way to circumvent MC application of the DVD;1 "extension" to the files! Still an awkward workaround, and too late if the files have already been imported. If we could just reduce the solution to simply changing the file extension...