News:

Current Full E-Touch Version: 10.2.0
Current Demo E-Touch Version: 10.0.0
Current Beta: 10.2.1 Beta 22 (09/02/23)

Main Menu

Help Duplicate Music Library

Started by Clint Van Eyssen, January 15, 2016, 10:11:33 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

Clint Van Eyssen

Help Please

I have been running Etouch Jukebox for a while now but recently I moved the music folder for my jukebox to a new location now when I open up Etouch Jukebox and I scroll through the pages and I get to the end of the library (Z) it continues to (A) of the next library. 

When I uninstall the program and reinstall everything works fine until I shutdown the computer and restart then it returns to duplicate library.

Please can somebody help?

Mark Norville

Very easy solution for this what you will need to do is go into your directory and delete the following files

records*.*
videos*.*

and then re generate the database again. The *.* is just saying delete all those files that are named records.lsc, records.lsr etc

Sadly this is the only way to do it as it is a flat database stored in files rather than for example a MySQL database.

Regards

Mark
I am now retired from the jukebox scene. I still visit from time to time and will help if I can, but apart from that. I am no longer a slave to downloading and tagging.

Barcrest

Deleting those files will work if you are running everything as admin otherwise it stores them somewhere else. If you run config and use generate rather than update and put the ticks in to clear the artists, genres and years data it should be fine.

As i say run everything as admin to prevent windows adding in some oddities.
Keep on Rocking in the Free World \m/ ;D\m/



Jukebox Stats...

Mark Norville

Quote from: Barcrest on January 15, 2016, 12:52:43 PM
As i say run everything as admin to prevent windows adding in some oddities.

I am either going to get that tattooed or put in my signature lol
I am now retired from the jukebox scene. I still visit from time to time and will help if I can, but apart from that. I am no longer a slave to downloading and tagging.

Clint Van Eyssen