Listing track numbers in file manager

DaveB

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I am wondering if there is a way to have the file explorer in Linux Mint to show the track numbers for mp3's? Any help or information would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.


Dave
 


G'day Dave, Welcome to Linux.org

I can understand wanting to number your mp3's. Mine are sorted by name only.

I have 1257 mp3 tracks, stored in folder on an external drive which is formatted ext3/4

If I right click in an open space in amongst those those tracks I see the below:
Screenshot from 2026-06-19 08-43-20.png

So, I do not see an easy way to get what you are after.

However, there will be others with more knowledge than myself will undoubtedly see your post.

Be patient, this is an international site and timezones vary widely.
 
Last edited:
I don't want to but the track number as part of the song title. I would like a seperate number column.
 
..the file explorer in Linux Mint..

@DaveB you should probably tell us which Linux Mint version, and the DE (Desktop Environment)

The File Managers differ.

Cinnamon - Nemo

MATE - Caja and

Xfce - Thunar

Chris Turner
wizardfromoz
 
I've built an audio collection and from my experience you won't be happy with any sort of filtering/grouping of file names. I read that Dolphin can read metadata of the files, i.e. the ID3 tags, and group accordingly. I have not tried it, but (again) in my experience the ID3 tags of collected albums/tracks are too random to satisfy good hierarchical organisation.

What I usually do first thing on importing new music to the collection is run it through a music library manager that harmonises the ID3 tags according to official music library records. In doing so, it also brings the individual tracks and directory ordering into a uniform format (chosen by me. It is not, but it could be Album1.1.Songtitle.mp3, Album1.2.Songtitle.mp3) on import. AFTER doing this, you get adequate file grouping in a file manager, be it per ID3 tag or regular file listing.

So my advice to you is to get a music library software you enjoy using which supports updating the ID3 metadata. After you're done using it you'll see how much better it does everything else you try to do with the music (like creating playlists on the fly, etc).
 


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