I have a large collection of television series sitting on a NAS box, that shares media via samba and dlna throughout my home. To enable a random feature, I created a batch script as follows to make a playlist file:
@Echo Off
color 0e
Echo PLEASE WAIT, BUILDING PLAYLIST FILE, EXCLUDING ALL BAT, TXT, M3U, SRT and JPG FILES
del "playlist.m3u"
Setlocal EnableDelayedExpansion
set _tmp=%1
Set _t0=1
If ["%CD%"]==["%CD:~0,3%"] Set _t0=0
For /F "tokens=*" %%A In ('Dir "%*" /a-d /b /on /s ^|find /v ".bat"^| find /v ".m3u"^|find /v ".txt"^| find /v ".srt"^|find /v ".jpg"') Do (
Set _t1=%%A
Set _t2=!_t1:%CD%=!
Echo !_t2:~%_t0%!)>>playlist.m3u
So, I have one of these batch files in each directory (one per TV show) as well as the parent folder (TV) and my users can enable random in WMP, VLC or w/e player they like, and just click the playlist to watch random anything, or more specifically a random episode of a specific show.
So, on to my question: why is my piped output not alphabetical? I really want to accomplish this in MS-DOS / CMD as programming is not my expertise, and this is pretty much the limit of my capability with scripting or anything else. I imagine the FIND command could be used more elegantly to filter out specific file types, and I suspect therein lies my issues with trying to sort the output. Even the show-specific playlists appear to have a random sort order (files within seasons are alphabetical, but the season order appears random) I was also wondering if someone could shed some light on getting folders with "&" in the name not breaking the output procedure.
Any help would be appreciated.
-T.J.