Jalv is a simple but fully featured LV2 host for Jack. It runs LV2 plugins and exposes their ports as Jack ports, essentially making any LV2 plugin function as a Jack application.
Triceratops is an analogue style polyphonic subtractive synthesizer plugin, for use with the LV2 plugin architecture, at this time there is no standalone version. An up to date version of the LV2 library is required along with a suitable host (e.g. Qtractor, Jalv, Ardour).
Title formatting in foobar2000 is a system that allows you to control how information about your music is displayed in the interface. It doesn’t modify the audio files themselves or change tags — it only affects how metadata and other information is shown in playlists, status bar, or window title.
Think of it like a template language: you define a pattern for text, and foobar2000 fills in the fields with actual track information. For example, you can make the playlist display tracks as:
Artist - Track Title (Album)
Why Title Formatting Exists
Music files contain metadata such as:
Artist
Album
Track title
Track number
Year
Duration
Different users want to display this information differently. Title formatting lets you:
Decide which information to display
Choose the order of information
Add separators, labels, or punctuation
Optionally display certain information only when it exists
For example, you might want to show the album only if it exists. Title formatting makes that possible.
Where To Use Title Formatting
You typically use title formatting in three main places:
Playlist columns — to customize how each column displays track info.
Status bar — to show the “Now Playing” track in a readable format.
Window title — to display the currently playing track in the foobar2000 window or taskbar.
Core Concepts You Need to Know
There are three core concepts that beginners must understand:
Plain Text: Text you type exactly as it should appear.
Fields: Metadata values from the audio files (e.g., %artist%, %title%).
Conditional Logic: Optional logic to handle missing fields or customize output dynamically.
Plain Text in Title Formatting
Any normal text you type is displayed exactly as written. This is useful for labels, punctuation, or separators:
Now Playing:
You can combine plain text with fields to make output more readable:
Now Playing: %artist% - %title%
This will display something like:
Now Playing: Radiohead - Paranoid Android
Fields (Metadata Tags)
Fields are placeholders that pull metadata from your music files. They are written inside percent signs:
%artist%
Some common fields include:
Field
Meaning
%artist%
Track artist
%album%
Album name
%title%
Track title
%tracknumber%
Track number
%date%
Year or release date
%length%
Track duration
Example combining fields:
%artist% - %title%
Output:
Radiohead - Paranoid Android
Combining Plain Text and Fields
You can mix plain text with fields to create more structured output. For example:
%artist% – %title% (%album%)
Output:
Radiohead – Paranoid Android (OK Computer)
Handling Missing Information
If a field does not exist in the file, foobar2000 simply displays nothing. For example, if %composer% is missing:
%composer%
The output will be blank. To prevent blank parentheses or awkward spacing, you can use conditional logic.
Using Conditional Logic with $if()
The $if() function allows you to display text only when a field has a value:
$if(condition,then,else)
Example:
%artist% - %title%$if(%album%, (%album%),)
This will display the album in parentheses only if %album% exists. Otherwise, it leaves that part empty.
Practical Examples
Playlist Column
%artist% - %title%
Status Bar
Now Playing: %artist% – %title%
Window Title
%artist% – %title% | foobar2000
Useful Built-In Fields
These fields are always available and do not require files to be tagged:
Field
Meaning
%filename%
File name
%path%
Full file path
%codec%
Audio codec
%bitrate%
Bitrate
%samplerate%
Sample rate
Things Beginners Can Ignore
Nested functions
Math expressions
String replacement logic
Legacy syntax
Advanced grouping
Starter Setup for New Users
For someone just installing foobar2000, start with these basic formats:
%artist% - %title%
Now Playing: %artist% – %title%$if(%album%, (%album%),)
%artist% – %title%
Final Notes
%field% is the most important concept
$if() handles missing or optional data elegantly
Some data and fields depend upon components being installed
foo_tfsandbox
A good place to start is by installing foo_tfsandbox, this component allows you to experiment with title formatting expressions and fields before you implement them.
Title Formatting Fields:
$info(referenced_offset) ~ shows time in format mm:ss:ff where ff are CD frames. For the first track it will show nothing instead of 00:00:00 hydrogenaud.io/index.php?topic=118733.msg979344
Title Formatting Examples: Name | Pattern | Alignment
Display Dynamic Range: Album DR: $if2(%album dynamic range%,–) | Track DR: $if2(%dynamic range%,–) Bits (bit depth) | $ifequal([%__bitspersample%],0,16,%__bitspersample%) | Left
Test your audio equipment, online. AudioCheck gives you access to an extensive collection of sound tests, playable online and downloadable in high-quality for patrons. The audio material provided here will help you assess the audio equipment connected to your computer. Using this website, you will be able to:
Test your hearing, speakers, headphones, digital-to-analog converters… and more!
Design your own sound tests using our high quality waveform generators.
Download our sound files to your favorite audio player, and use your player as a portable audio test device.
The Atari SAP Music Archive is a free project which has the aim to collect most of the ATARI XL/XE music in one huge collection. The tunes in ASMA are stored in SAP format that can be replayed by a SAP player currently available for many platforms (see the PLAYERS section).
This is Windows or Linux program, designed for playing music for AY-3-8912 sound chip (or its analogs are AY-3-8910 and YM2149F). Emulator emulates these sound chips and does not require real ones. Additionally emulator can play CD’s audio tracks and MIDI-files. Optional BASS by Ian Luck can be used for playing MP3 and MOD music.
Plays audio files from many systems including the ZX Spectrum, Acorn, Amstrad, Amiga, Atari, Commodore 64, GameBoy, MSX, Nes, PC, Phillips, SNES, Sam Coupe, Sega, TurboGrafX, etc.