Queries¶
Many of beets’ commands are built around query strings: searches that select tracks and albums from your library. This page explains the query string syntax, which is meant to vaguely resemble the syntax used by Web search engines.
Keyword¶
This command:
$ beet list love
will show all tracks matching the query string love
. Any unadorned word like this matches anywhere in a track’s metadata, so you’ll see all the tracks with “love” in their title, in their album name, in the artist, and so on.
For example, this is what I might see when I run the command above:
Against Me! - Reinventing Axl Rose - I Still Love You Julie
Air - Love 2 - Do the Joy
Bag Raiders - Turbo Love - Shooting Stars
Bat for Lashes - Two Suns - Good Love
...
Combining Keywords¶
Multiple keywords are implicitly joined with a Boolean “and.” That is, if a query has two keywords, it only matches tracks that contain both keywords. For example, this command:
$ beet ls magnetic tomorrow
matches songs from the album “The House of Tomorrow” by The Magnetic Fields in my library. It doesn’t match other songs by the Magnetic Fields, nor does it match “Tomorrowland” by Walter Meego—those songs only have one of the two keywords I specified.
Keywords can also be joined with a Boolean “or” using a comma. For example, the command:
$ beet ls magnetic tomorrow , beatles yesterday
will match both “The House of Tomorrow” by the Magnetic Fields, as well as
“Yesterday” by The Beatles. Note that the comma has to be followed by a space
(e.g., foo,bar
will be treated as a single keyword, not as an OR-query).
Specific Fields¶
Sometimes, a broad keyword match isn’t enough. Beets supports a syntax that lets
you query a specific field—only the artist, only the track title, and so on.
Just say field:value
, where field
is the name of the thing you’re trying
to match (such as artist
, album
, or title
) and value
is the
keyword you’re searching for.
For example, while this query:
$ beet list dream
matches a lot of songs in my library, this more-specific query:
$ beet list artist:dream
only matches songs by the artist The-Dream. One query I especially appreciate is one that matches albums by year:
$ beet list -a year:2012
Recall that -a
makes the list
command show albums instead of individual
tracks, so this command shows me all the releases I have from this year.
Phrases¶
You can query for strings with spaces in them by quoting or escaping them using your shell’s argument syntax. For example, this command:
$ beet list the rebel
shows several tracks in my library, but these (equivalent) commands:
$ beet list "the rebel"
$ beet list the\ rebel
only match the track “The Rebel” by Buck 65. Note that the quotes and
backslashes are not part of beets’ syntax; I’m just using the escaping
functionality of my shell (bash or zsh, for instance) to pass the rebel
as a
single argument instead of two.
Regular Expressions¶
While ordinary keywords perform simple substring matches, beets also supports
regular expression matching for more advanced queries. To run a regex query, use
an additional :
between the field name and the expression:
$ beet list "artist::Ann(a|ie)"
That query finds songs by Anna Calvi and Annie but not Annuals. Similarly, this query prints the path to any file in my library that’s missing a track title:
$ beet list -p title::^$
To search all fields using a regular expression, just prefix the expression
with a single :
, like so:
$ beet list ":Ho[pm]eless"
Regular expressions are case-sensitive and build on Python’s built-in implementation. See Python’s documentation for specifics on regex syntax.
Most command-line shells will try to interpret common characters in regular
expressions, such as ()[]|
. To type those characters, you’ll need to
escape them (e.g., with backslashes or quotation marks, depending on your
shell).
Numeric Range Queries¶
For numeric fields, such as year, bitrate, and track, you can query using one-
or two-sided intervals. That is, you can find music that falls within a
range of values. To use ranges, write a query that has two dots (..
) at
the beginning, middle, or end of a string of numbers. Dots in the beginning
let you specify a maximum (e.g., ..7
); dots at the end mean a minimum
(4..
); dots in the middle mean a range (4..7
).
For example, this command finds all your albums that were released in the ‘90s:
$ beet list -a year:1990..1999
and this command finds MP3 files with bitrates of 128k or lower:
$ beet list format:MP3 bitrate:..128000
Date and Date Range Queries¶
Date-valued fields, such as added and mtime, have a special query syntax that lets you specify years, months, and days as well as ranges between dates.
Dates are written separated by hyphens, like year-month-day
, but the month
and day are optional. If you leave out the day, for example, you will get
matches for the whole month.
Date intervals, like the numeric intervals described above, are separated by
two dots (..
). You can specify a start, an end, or both.
Here is an example that finds all the albums added in 2008:
$ beet ls -a 'added:2008'
Find all items added in the years 2008, 2009 and 2010:
$ beet ls 'added:2008..2010'
Find all items added before the year 2010:
$ beet ls 'added:..2009'
Find all items added on or after 2008-12-01 but before 2009-10-12:
$ beet ls 'added:2008-12..2009-10-11'
Find all items with a file modification time between 2008-12-01 and 2008-12-03:
$ beet ls 'mtime:2008-12-01..2008-12-02'
Path Queries¶
Sometimes it’s useful to find all the items in your library that are
(recursively) inside a certain directory. Use the path:
field to do this:
$ beet list path:/my/music/directory
In fact, beets automatically recognizes any query term containing a path
separator (/
on POSIX systems) as a path query if that path exists, so this
command is equivalent as long as /my/music/directory
exist:
$ beet list /my/music/directory
Note that this only matches items that are already in your library, so a path query won’t necessarily find all the audio files in a directory—just the ones you’ve already added to your beets library.
Path queries are case sensitive if the queried path is on a case-sensitive filesystem.
Sort Order¶
Queries can specify a sort order. Use the name of the field you want to sort
on, followed by a +
or -
sign to indicate ascending or descending
sort. For example, this command:
$ beet list -a year+
will list all albums in chronological order. You can also specify several sort orders, which will be used in the same order as they appear in your query:
$ beet list -a genre+ year+
This command will sort all albums by genre and, in each genre, in chronological order.
The artist
and albumartist
keys are special: they attempt to use their
corresponding artist_sort
and albumartist_sort
fields for sorting
transparently (but fall back to the ordinary fields when those are empty).
Lexicographic sorts are case insensitive by default, resulting in the following
sort order: Bar foo Qux
. This behavior can be changed with the
sort_case_insensitive configuration option. Case sensitive sort will
result in lower-case values being placed after upper-case values, e.g.,
Bar Qux foo
.
You can set the default sorting behavior with the sort_item and sort_album configuration options.