CD/DVD File Naming

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When burning Data CDs, MC provides a wealth of options for naming the files on disc however you'd like. You can have it burn the files into Artist/Album folders, Genre folders, or any custom setup you'd like (using any of the available Tags in MC), and the same applies to specifying file names.

Burn Disc Options

Showing the Burn Disc options pop-up menu.

To access the file naming options, first set up your Data CD/DVD burn queue normally, including adding any files you'd like to burn onto the disc. When you are ready, click the Options link in the Burn Disc Action Window. In the Burn Options menu that pops up, there are two different submenus that relate to file and folder naming on disc: CD/DVD Folder Naming and CD/DVD File Naming. These submenus provide the following options:

  • CD/DVD Folder Naming
    • Artist/Album - will create [Artist] folders in the root of the disc, and then put individual [Album] folders inside of them.
    • Artist - creates only [Artist] folders.
    • Album - creates only [Album] folders.
    • Artist - Album - creates a folder for each album in the root of the disc, named in the style "[Artist] - [Album]"
    • Genre/Artist/Album - creates a three-tiered folder structure.
    • Same as Original - uses the same folder structure as the source files on disk.
    • Custom -- Allows you to choose your own custom folder structure.
  • CD/DVD File Naming
    • Track Name
    • Track Number - Track Name
    • Artist - Track Name
    • Same as Original - uses the same filename as the source files on disk.
    • Custom -- Allows you to choose your own custom file naming scheme.

After you choose both a Folder and File name system for your disc, you can click on the Details link in the Burn Disc Action Window to preview the results of the burn. Remember, if you put the files into Subfolders of any kind, you will need to click the Show Files in Subfolders button to see them listed in the Burn Details window. In the example picture below, the options Artist/Album (for Folder Naming) and Track Number - Track Name (for File Naming) were chosen.

Example of selected disc naming options. Click to see full size.

Custom Folder and File Naming

If none of the preset options in the Burn Options pull-down menu work for your purposes, you can also choose Custom from the submenu and define your own settings. You specify these in the same way you use the Rename Files from Properties tool, by specifying tags using the square brackets. Some examples might be:

Custom Folder Name: [Genre]\[Keyword]\[Album]\
Custom File Name: [Disc #] - [Track #] - [Name]
Custom File Name: [Artist] - [Date (year)] - [Name]

Select Custom under the CD/DVD File or Folder Naming submenus.

You can also use advanced formatting to format dates and other expressions to build complicated filenaming rules:

FormatDate([Date, 0], yyyyMMdd) - [Camera] - [Name]

In the Custom Folder Naming dialog, there is also an option to use "Assorted" for [Artist] on multi-artist albums. You can use this option to keep compilation albums grouped together on disc if desired.

Using the List Order

One other "special" option is found in the Custom File Naming dialog, called "Prefix the list order to the CD filename". Because the Burn Disc details window acts like a regular Playlist and has a specific sequence, you can use this option to burn the files onto disc in a specific order, even when burning a data disc.

One common reason for doing this is if you want the files to play in a specific order, but you have a MP3 CD Player that cannot read M3U or other playlist formats. In this case, the CD player would normally just play the files alphabetically ordered by Folder/Filename.

If you have a special order of songs in mind for a MP3 CD Collection, you will need to name the files themselves (on the disc) with a number prefix so that the MP3 CD Player plays them in the right order. The Prefix the list order option allows you to do this. Be sure to also select None as your Folder naming structure or your files will still end up playing in the wrong order (because the CD player will play them in the alphabetic order of the folders before it gets to the filenames with the number prefixes).

Cdrename2.png

Thanks marko.