In my file, I have
from mutagen.id3 import ID3
tags = ID3(mp3_file)
Now if I do print(tags.keys())
It informs me that there’s a TXXX:FMPS_Rating_Amarok_Score
But when I attempt to print(tags["TXXX:FMPS_Rating_Amarok_Score"])
It says there’s a KeyError. What am I doing wrong?
I suspect your ‘tags’ is not a dict object, but some extension of it. Lookup its type, or the documentation of the library you are using for how to retrieve values from an ID3 object.
Looking at the docs, it looks like it’s an instance of
ID3Tags
, which appears to be based on couple of helper classesmutagen._util.DictProxy
andmutagen._tags.Tags
, whereDictProxy
(and its baseDictMixin
) provides the dict-like interface. Underneath that, it looks like it’s storing the actual values in a simpledict
(DictProxy.__dict
) and proxying to that.I’m not seeing anything obvious that would muck with the incoming lookup key anywhere in
ID3Tags
orDictProxy.__getitem__
or any of the other base classes.I have to jump off to pack for a trip, but might try this out later in a live shell session to see if there’s something odd going on with the API.
In the meantime, OP, are you positive you were looking at the same file each time? Was this in a script or in a live Python shell session?
For testing purposes, same file every time, this one: https://file.coffee/u/IxKmfKfUwgPybq_vv8YJc.mp3
So I tried all the different methods you mentioned but everyone fails and so when I took a deep breath, I figured that I’m probably not understanding properly how it works.
I can say this without a doubt though, the needless complexity regarding these rating tags is stupid. I don’t understand why people thought this made sense. It’s illogical!
This is strange. I tried your snippet with your file and it works for me:
(env) ➜ testing cat x.py from mutagen.id3 import ID3 tags = ID3("myfile.mp3") print(tags["TXXX:FMPS_Rating_Amarok_Score"]) (env) ➜ testing python x.py 0.78
I’m getting 0.66 when I do get a rating. But I’m definitely not getting that to print. Here’s the full file
import os import mutagen import requests import urllib.parse from mutagen.easyid3 import EasyID3 from mutagen.id3 import ID3 from pprint import pprint # Navidrome credentials navidrome_url = "http://navidrome.local:4533" navidrome_username = "your-username" navidrome_password = "your-password" hex_encoded_pass = navidrome_password.encode().hex() headers = None # Directory containing MP3 files mp3_directory = "/nfs" def extract_rating(mp3_file): global rating audio = mutagen.File(mp3_file) tags = ID3(mp3_file) print(tags["TXXX:FMPS_Rating_AMarok_Score"]) #Gives KeyError for frame in tags.getall("TXXX"): rating = frame #This is terrible. The last key is the rating and since I can't call it by the key, I'm just refilling the variable print(rating) # It was moaning about strings and floats, so commented out # if rating >= 1.0: # return 5 # elif rating >= 0.8: # return 4 # elif rating >= 0.6: # return 3 # elif rating >= 0.4: # return 2 # elif rating >= 0.2: # return 1 # else: # return 0 # return rating def update_rating_on_navidrome(track_id, rating): url = f"{navidrome_url}/rest/setRating?id={track_id}&u={navidrome_username}&p=enc: {hex_encoded_pass}&v=1.12.0&rating={rating}" data = {"rating": rating} response = requests.get(url, headers=headers, json=data) def find_track_id_on_navidrome(mp3_file): url = urllib.parse(url) url = f"{navidrome_url}/rest/getSong?path={mp3_file.encode()}&u={navidrome_username}&p=enc: {hex_encoded_pass}&v=1.12.0" response = requests.get(url, headers=headers, json=data) return url[track_id] if response.status_code == 204: print(f"Rating updated successfully for track {track_id}") else: print(f"Failed to update rating for track {track_id}: {response.text}") print("hello") #test = print(os.listdir(mp3_directory)) for foldername in os.listdir(mp3_directory): folderpath = "/".join([mp3_directory, foldername]) for filename in os.listdir(folderpath): if filename.endswith(".mp3"): mp3_file = "/".join([folderpath, filename]) rating = extract_rating(mp3_file) print(mp3_file, rating, sep= "_____") print(rating) # # # Implement logic to find the track ID on Navidrome based on filename or other metadata # track_id = find_track_id_on_navidrome(filename) # Replace with your implementation# # # if track_id: # update_rating_on_navidrome(track_id, rating) # else: # print(f"Track ID not found on Navidrome for {filename}")
Have I called something erroneously that would mess it up?
Sorry if it’s terrible to read, up until I started trying to do this, I had never touched Python before and haven’t attempted to code for years.
Dict keys are case sensitive in python. In your code I can see the key you’ve used has a capital M in Amarok. Maybe that’s the issue here