9/13/2023 0 Comments Exiftool video tag![]() So your best bet is to look at that SuperUser answer and try FFmpeg to edit the data. Some more digging and I found this SuperUser answer to use FFmpeg to change the values. But as you say, it's a moot point, as exiftool can't edit these tags.īut I tried again and looked at my file (which has track names "Stereo" and "Surround") with MediaInfo and it listed those values under "Title" for each track. You forgot to include the options I listed. Quote from: StarGeek on November 05, 2020, 07:34:34 PM I've usedįfprobe to extract chapter names and other meta data in the past, so I have it Yes, I guess my corrected posting came after you were already responding!Īnyway, thanks for the info and the pointers, I'll check out SuperUser. In tags, though I was thinking that "Track 3 Name" was a tag name. I would still wonder though: I'm trying to set a tag "Track 3 Name" (or "Track 2 Name"Īs I now realize I titled my post), which has spaces in it, and maybe that's not allows ![]() ![]() Hmmm, so it does look like the new "Track" thing is under "ItemList". Track4Name : Commentary with Peter Bogdonovish I'm not sure whether I'm doing something wrong this isn't possible or it's a bugĬode Select Expand % exiftool -g1 -a -s "-Track*" testkane3.m4v But if I search for "-Track*" tags, then it finds it and I do find that if I try to just get the value of the "Track 3 Name" tag, then it reportsĪn "Invalid TAG name". The four trailing metadata info of "Image Size", "Megapixels", "Avg Bitrate", and "Media Data Offset" are moved toward the bottom of the metadata output fromĪn "exiftool" metadata dump, following the new "Track" tag, and preceeding The result is that a new tag is created that is just "Track", and that has the newlyĪssigned value of "Mono (AAC)", and the original "Track 3 Name" tag is unchanged.Īnother side effect is that the two tags (or metadata) for "Media Data Size" and I've tested with both exiftool version 11.88 & 12.09. % exiftool -Track\ 3\ Name="Mono (AAC)" testvideo.m4v % exiftool "-Track 3 Name"="Mono (AAC)" testvideo.m4v Here are the two ways I've tried to make the alteration: Trying to use "exiftool" to correct those. I'd like to indicated that one is "Mono (AAC)" and the other is "Mono (AC3)". So I have a video file that has multiple audio tracks, two of which are just named "Mono". But to answer your question, you could try this command to change all tags ending with 'date': exiftool '-date<$-04:00" 20181223_000542.mp4 This will work correctly as long as the video was taken in the same time zone as the computer you are currently using. In that case you can simply use this command (see exiftool FAQ #5)Įxiftool -api QuickTimeUTC "-CreateDateyou will probably want to rename the exiftool(-k).exe to just exiftool.exe and place it someplace in your PATH (see install exiftool-Windows).
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