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I'm trying to write a bash script that will download all of the youtube videos from a playlist and save them to a specific file name based on the title of the youtube video itself. So far I have two separate pieces of code that do what I want but I don't know how to combine them together to function as a unit.
This piece of code finds the titles of all of the youtube videos on a given page: curl -s '$1' grep ' -f2 cut -d. OK so after further research and updating my version of youtube-dl, it turns out that this functionality is now built directly into the program, negating the need for a shell script to solve the playlist download issue on youtube. The full documentation can be found here: but the simple solution to my original question is as follows: 1) youtube-dl will process a playlist link automatically, there is no need to individually feed it the URLs of the videos that are contained therein (this negates the need to use grep to search for 'watch?' To find the unique video id 2) there is now an option included to format the filename with a variety of options including:. id: The sequence will be replaced by the video identifier.
url: The sequence will be replaced by the video URL. uploader: The sequence will be replaced by the nickname of the person who uploaded the video. uploaddate: The sequence will be replaced by the upload date in YYYYMMDD format.
title: The sequence will be replaced by the literal video title. ext: The sequence will be replaced by the appropriate extension (like flv or mp4).
epoch: The sequence will be replaced by the Unix epoch when creating the file. autonumber: The sequence will be replaced by a five-digit number that will be increased with each download, starting at zero. The syntax for this output option is as follows (where NAME is any of the options shown above): youtube-dl -o '%(NAME)s' As an example, to answer my original question, the syntax is as follows: youtube-dl -o '%(title)s.%(ext)s' Thanks again to those who responded to my question, your help is greatly appreciated.