I think we are in agreement that the Redump site can store the complete cuesheet, but it should only include the REM SESSION lines in the download .cue (and exclude the REM LEAD-OUT, REM LEAD-IN, REM PREGAP because they are standard values that should be the same always
Please hide the Lead-in, Lead-out, Pregap, Disc total lines from the disc page and exclude them from the .cue download as discussed before.
Last edited by Jackal on Sat Jul 27, 2019 12:43 pm, edited 1 time in total.
@Jackal, all the extra lines beside "session number" are excluded from the cue downloads.
I will exclude them from being shown on the disc page, no problem.
The thing is just, i remember that somebody was wanting them to be shown and the disc total length to be calculated.
I dont know for what purpose we would the disc total. Dreamcast didn't need it either.
@Nexy, the Carnivores dump seems to be missing the INDEX 01 for Track02. Can you try opening the .bin (without the .cue) as Mode2/2352 and see if it opens and shows the contents?
REM SESSION 01
FILE "Carnivores (USA) (Track 1).bin" BINARY
TRACK 01 MODE2/2352
INDEX 01 00:00:00
REM SESSION 02
FILE "Carnivores (USA) (Track 2).bin" BINARY
TRACK 02 MODE2/2352
INDEX 01 00:00:00
I don't necessarily agree with removing the comments, there's no guarantee that standards are used, particularly with PC. Better to futureproof it in my opinion, since it's possible that some protection may put something in a huge pre-gap or something. There's no rule book that says things have to follow standard, they clearly don't on uncountable occasions.
We agreed to hide it until we find a disc that has different standards.
All the discs so far, including Bleemcast, have the same lead-out, lead-in, pregap lengths between sessions. They are formally specified in official documents, so it's unlikely that a disc will deviate from it.
Last edited by Jackal on Sun Jul 28, 2019 12:55 am, edited 1 time in total.
@iR0b0t, maybe you can add type = Single-Density Area + High-Density Area to the disc page of Dreamcast discs? the same way as is done with Multisession discs.