On 5/20/13 4:14 PM, Al Eisner wrote:
> One apparently cannot use the multiple-file selection for changing the
> file Info -- iTunes warns that you will be entering the same information
> for all files.
Yes you can. You'll get the warning, it's just a safety net there to
warn you you could be doing something you don't want to. Just make
sure that what you are changing you truly want to be on every track
you selected. So, if it's an all Beethoven CD than seeing that
warning after entering "Beethoven" in the Composer field is natural.
However if you put "1" into the track field and saw that warning you
would want to cancel as you wouldn't want the track number to be "1"
for multiple track.
The shift-select has been around for 10 years on Windows and OS X.
Open a excel spreadsheet and highlight one row, let's say row 10. Go
to row 20 and Shift-click it and it should highlight rows 10 *THROUGH* 20.
Same in iTunes if your in Song display and tracks are displayed in
rows, like an Excel spreadsheet.
Selecting Consecutive Songs
1Click the first song of the group you want. Your selection should
turn blue.
2Hold down Shift. Shift allows you to select a group of consecutive
files, so that you don't have to click each one individually.
3Click the last song of the group you want. Make sure you're still
holding down Shift when you click on the last song. The entire group,
from first song to last, should be highlighted in blue.
Selecting Non-Consecutive Songs
1Click the first song you want. Your selection should turn blue.
2Hold down Ctrl (PC) or Command (Mac). This key should be located
right next to your Spacebar. Either one will work.
3Click on the next song you want. Make sure you're still holding down
Ctrl or Command. Don't let go of it until you're done selecting all
the songs you want.
4Continue clicking other songs. You can scroll up or down within
iTunes to find other songs without losing your selection.
You can let go of Ctrl or Command without losing your selection. Just
make sure you press down on it again before clicking another song.
Otherwise, you'll lose the whole lot.
If you tend to have trouble with this process, it's probably safer to
just keep holding down Ctrl or Command.
Steve