Copyright 2012-2014 David Rudie [email protected] Project Page: https://github.com/dlrudie/Snip
This is a small application that sits in the system tray and updates a text file with the currently playing audio track.
It supports Spotify, iTunes, and Winamp.
If you choose to use iTunes then Snip will automatically launch iTunes. This is the behavior of the COM API and there's nothing I can do about it. If you only use Spotify then you don't have to worry about it.
To switch between players just right-click on the icon in the system tray.
Snip will write a generic format output to a file called Snip.txt within the same folder as Snip.exe. If you choose to save information to separate files then the files will be called Snip_Arist.txt, Snip_Track.txt, Snip_Album.txt, and if you choose to save track history then it will be saved to a file called Snip_History.txt.
- Spotify: Artist, Track, Album, Artwork
- iTunes: Artist, Track, Album, Artwork
- Winamp: Artist, Track
- foobar2000: Artist, Track
- VLC: Nothing (It uses whatever the titlebar says)
For Winamp support to work properly you must change some options.
Make sure that when you install Winamp you enable "Global Hotkey Support" under "User Interface Extensions" or hotkeys will not work.
Inside Winamp open up the options window.
-
Under General Preferences make sure "Show the playlist number in the Windows taskbar" is disabled.
-
Under General Preferences->Global Hotkeys make sure "Enable default multimedia key support" is enabled.
-
Under General Preferences->Titles make sure "Use advanced title formatting when possible" is enabled.
Then you need to edit the formatting to look like this: %title% – %artist%
The hyphen used is an en dash character! Snip uses this character internally to split the text apart so make sure you use this en dash character or Snip will not read it correctly!
For foobar2000 support to work properly you must change some options.
Inside foobar2000 open up the preferences window.
Expand the Display options and select Default User Interface. At the bottom of the window you will need to change "Window title" to look like this: %title% – %artist%
The hyphen used is an en dash character! Snip uses this character internally to split the text apart so make sure you use this en dash character or Snip will not read it correctly!
Snip looks for the window class and "VLC media player" window title to determine if VLC is running. If the title bar is anything different then it will not be found. If a track is currently playing when you start Snip you just have to push stop and Snip will find VLC.
- Next Track: Ctrl, Alt, ]
- Previous Track: Ctrl, Alt, [
- Volume Up: Ctrl, Alt, +
- Volume Down: Ctrl, Alt, -
- Mute Track: Ctrl, Alt, M
- Pause Track: Ctrl, Alt, P
- Play/Pause Track: Ctrl, Alt, Enter
- Stop Track: Ctrl, Alt, Backspace
Not all hotkeys work between Spotify, iTunes, Winamp, foobar2000, and VLC.