I have a "smart" phone that doesn't seem to have a music shuffle function, so the next best thing is to write a bash script to prepend all 开发者_StackOverflowfilenames in the current directory with a random number.
Is this difficult to do?
No, this is not hard to do. It will however mess up your carefully crafted filenames, and might be hard to undo.
You can use $RANDOM
as a simple source of random numbers in bash. For your
case:
#!/bin/bash
for file in *; do
mv "$file" $RANDOM-"$file"
done
I didn't test this. You probably want to test this yourself on some small sample to make sure you know what it does.
This script will shuffle files and reshuffle them if they've already been shuffled. If you pass it an argument of -u
it will unshuffle the files (remove the random prefix).
#!/bin/bash
for file in *.mp3
do
if [[ -d $file ]]
then
continue # skip directories
fi
if [[ $file =~ ^1[0-9]{5}9-(.*).mp3$ ]] # get basename
then
name=${BASH_REMATCH[1]} # of a previously shuffled file
else
name=${file%.mp3} # of an unshuffled file
fi
if [[ $1 != -u ]]
then
mv "$file" "1$(printf "%05d" $RANDOM)9-$name.mp3" # shuffle
else
if [[ ! -e "$file.mp3" ]]
then
mv "$file" "$name.mp3" # unshuffle
fi
fi
done
It uses a fixed-width five digit random number after a "1" and followed by "9-" so the shuffled filenames are of the form: 1ddddd9-filename maybe with spaces - and other stuff.1983.mp3
.
If you re-run the script, it will reshuffle the files by changing the random number in the prefix.
The -u
argument will remove the 1ddddd9-
prefix.
The script requires Bash >= version 3.2.
Not really difficult. Something like:
for i in *; do mv "$i" $RANDOM-"$i"; done
Here's a script that will run on OS X and linux from my blog.
#!/bin/bash
#
# FILE:
# prepend_random_num.sh
# ABOUT:
# Prepends a random number between 1-65000 and an underscore to all files of specified type
# Runs on Mac OSX & Linux
# EXAMPLE:
# $ ls
# a.jpg b.jpg
# $ sh prepend_random_num.sh jpg
# $ ls
# 138_b.jpg 8474_a.jpg
for file in *.$1
do
rand=$(jot -r 1 1 65000 || shuf -i 1-65000 -n 1)
mv "$file" "$rand"_"$file"
done
Through this shell, your music library will be played randomly, without repeating any songs until all have been played. The history of songs played is recorded in the file ". Sh.his". This history is reset automatically if you added a song to the music library or have already heard all the songs of your library, generating a new random list ever. Whenever you want you can reset the history is deleting the file ". Sh.his".
#!/bin/bash
#-----------------------------------INFO----------------------------------------------------------
#Through this shell, your music library will be played randomly, without repeating any songs until all have been played.
#The history of songs played is recorded in the file "*. Sh.his".
#This history is reset automatically if you added a song to the music library or have already heard all the songs of your library,
#generating a new random list ever. Whenever you want you can reset the history is deleting the file "*. Sh.his".
#Press "q" to skip song
#Press "p" to pause song and resume song
#------------------------------CONFIGURATION------------------------------------------------------
#mplayer package needed (For debian/Ubuntu/Mint: "$ apt-get install mplayer")
#Select your music library path (all recursive folders will be included in the .mp3 files search):
path="/media/Datos/Música/Music/"
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
while true
do
cadena=$(find "$path" -iname '*.mp3') #search media files
nmedia=$(echo "$cadena" | wc -l)
if [ -f "$0.his" ] #file exist
then
value=$(<"$0.his") #read file
if [[ ( $(echo "$value" | sed -n 1p) != $nmedia ) || ( $(echo "$value" | sed -n 2p) == 0 ) ]] #reset file conditions
then
listrand=$(seq 1 $nmedia | shuf)
index=$nmedia
else #no reset file conditions
nmedia=$(echo "$value" | sed -n 1p)
index=$(echo "$value" | sed -n 2p)
listrand=$(echo "$value" | sed -n 3p)
listrand=$(echo "$listrand" | sed s/" "/\\n/g)
fi
else #file not exist
listrand=$(seq 1 $nmedia | shuf)
index=$nmedia
fi
nrand=$(echo "$listrand" | sed -n "$index"p) #select random number
cadena=$(echo "$cadena" | sed -n "$nrand"p) #select song with random number
index=$((index-1)) #write file
echo $nmedia > "$0.his"
echo $index >> "$0.his"
echo $listrand >> "$0.his"
mplayer "$cadena" #play media file
done
exit 0
I know this is pretty old, but I was just confronted with a similar problem, and maybe this'll still be useful. I just bought a cheap but waterproof MP3 player for running, which works fine except that in shuffling mode the same few songs seem to keep repeating. I found some instructions on LinuxQuestions.org that I could modify for my needs, so here's what I came up with after a little trial and error:
I created a folder called Running and put all my MP3s from my running playlist in there. (I capitalized the folder name so I don't accidentally delete it.)
#!/bin/bash
mkdir ../running_random
for fname in *.mp3
do
cp "$fname" ../running_random/$RANDOM."$fname".mp3
done
I call the script from inside the Running directory, copy the contents from the newly created running_random directory to my MP3 player, then I delete running_random.
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