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<blockquote data-quote="RoChess" data-source="post: 995098" data-attributes="member: 18896"><p>You have to adjust the noise filter to remove the [BD25] and [1080p x264 DTS 768] from the title, while keeping the '1998' info intact.</p><p> </p><p>As it stands now, "Lock & Stock [BD25][1080p x264 DTS 768][1998]" is turned into</p><p> </p><p>title = lock stock bd25 768</p><p>year = 1998</p><p> </p><p>The noise filter is done with complicated regular expressions, so expanding it to support your filenames to clean them up is not easy for everybody. Let me know if this syntax applies to all your files, or if there is a variation between them. If they are all "Title [useless][more useless][year].ext" then it is easy, but if you have slight variations, then RegExp will break. So provide as much info as possible and I'll show you what to do.</p><p> </p><p>PS: Your title is 9 characters different (hence the titlescore) from the title found with scraper-script. Unless you adjust your import slider to reckless, that is never going to be auto-approved. But this should auto-resolve itself with a good noise-filter.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RoChess, post: 995098, member: 18896"] You have to adjust the noise filter to remove the [BD25] and [1080p x264 DTS 768] from the title, while keeping the '1998' info intact. As it stands now, "Lock & Stock [BD25][1080p x264 DTS 768][1998]" is turned into title = lock stock bd25 768 year = 1998 The noise filter is done with complicated regular expressions, so expanding it to support your filenames to clean them up is not easy for everybody. Let me know if this syntax applies to all your files, or if there is a variation between them. If they are all "Title [useless][more useless][year].ext" then it is easy, but if you have slight variations, then RegExp will break. So provide as much info as possible and I'll show you what to do. PS: Your title is 9 characters different (hence the titlescore) from the title found with scraper-script. Unless you adjust your import slider to reckless, that is never going to be auto-approved. But this should auto-resolve itself with a good noise-filter. [/QUOTE]
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