At times that can feel really demanding or patronizing you feel people try to educate you on things you know about well and asking you for stuff you have explained already a trillion times. If you have an open source project people actually use, there will be people telling you how you really should support feature X, how easy this would be, that others do this and hence should you etc. Not excusing Marc’s behavior, though, which also was inappropriate.īut maybe a few words from me as maintainer of open source projects: I kind of get were Marc’s feelings and reactions are coming from. Someone flagged it now, and I think rightly so. The lyrics viewer does not have a mini player for controlling the music.Well, that escalated quickly and I think you know quite well that your last post at Marc went way over the top, escalated the heated debate to the next level and violated the code of conduct. When this happens, you will miss the option to do a manual search. These weren't local files which were improperly tagged, but tracks from the Spotify library. The application isn't flawless, while it did its job for the most part, it failed to fetch the lyrics occasionally. I couldn't test the program with Tidal, but it works with VLC, Foobar, Winamp, and both versions of Spotify (Desktop program and the UWP app). Versefy is a good lyrics finder, but it doesn't support auto-scrolling. The two icons next to it allow you to increase/decrease the font size. If you find it difficult to see, turn off the option by clicking the 5th button on the bottom toolbar. The application uses a bold font by default, which has a sort of shiny glow. You can disable/enable them, and move a source to the top of the list to prioritize it. It supports three services: Musixmatch, Genius and. Manage the lyrics providers from the program's settings. Toggle the focus mode by clicking the 3rd icon at the bottom of Versefy's interface, and the app will switch to a minimal interface, aka an icon-less distraction free mode. Hit the "lyrics from text" to open the lyrics page in your default browser. Versefy displays the album art, track's title, artist name of the song that's playing. The text is selectable, meaning you can copy and save the lyrics to a local file. Click the Prev and Next buttons to navigate between different versions of the lyrics. The search isn't exactly fast, but I'm guessing that the performance depends on the lyrics provider. Play a track in Spotify (or one of the supported players), and Versefy will automatically search for the corresponding lyrics and display the text in its window. Click the respective icon in the top left corner of the interface, to switch to the music player of your choice. This is perhaps the program's best feature. Besides Spotify, Versefy also supports Tidal, VLC, Foobar 2000 and Winamp. However you can't use it with the web version of the music streaming service. You don't need to log in to Spotify from Versefy, but the Spotify desktop program or the UWP app has to be running for the lyrics finder to work. Stick the window to stay on top of other programs by using the last option on the toolbar, this is useful when you are using Spotify minimized but still want to view the lyrics. The window is resizable, position it where you want to. It has a dark themed interface with a pleasant design, and an optional light theme that you may toggle from the toolbar at the bottom (2nd icon from the right). The freeware program is available on the Microsoft Store, and is a 4MB download. Well, you don't need it when you have third-party apps like Versefy, that do a better job. And it's also limited to a couple of dozen countries. Spotify has a built-in lyrics viewer, which in my opinion, is not perfect.
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