
It took about 3 minutes for my library, but that was on a network share. The actual renaming part may take a while. So long as the number of files it “got” is equal to the number of files renamed, you’re good to go! if they’re in use) you’ll get an error message and the program will continue. Renaming files… DONE! (Success: 23201, Failed: 0).įINISHED with 23201 files renamed out of 23201 files total, and 11593 CSV records total. Reading CSV File… DONE! (Stored 11593 out of 11593 records.) If it runs successfully, you should have something like this:ĭigitalJuiceRenamer.exe e:\temp\DigitalJuiceTracks.csv “\\fsrv01\Audio\Sound Effects\Digital Juice Sound FX Library DVD – Part 01-10″ Note: If there are spaces in either of your file paths, enclose the paths in double quotes (like in the sample below). IT WILL IMMEDIATELY START RENAMING FILES! Please read the readme.

I did a quick search for a solution, and came up with this StackExchange post wherein LiquidBlasted posted a series of Excel files that he’d generated by screen scraping the Juicer app.Įven though he somewhat automated that process, it sounds like a heck of a lot of work. Unfortunately the sound files on the DVDs are all named generically, such as 00293_SFX.wav, which is pretty useless. I have a bunch of other sound libraries, and want to be able to search them all at once. The problem is that I don’t want to use the Juicer app.

I lost the DVDs a while ago, but had already copied them to my file server.

They’re meant to be accessed with Digital Juice’s Juicer app, which contains all the metadata. The DVDs contained tons of small WAV and MP3 files of sound effects, foley and music.

I have some Digital Juice SFX library DVD files from circa 2006 or some such.
