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PyFLP is a parser for FL Studio project files (.flp) written in pure Python. It supports reading and editing. You don't need to understand the underlying format at all. I can't be overly technical here, so I give examples of what you can possibly do.Initialisation:
Code: Select all (#)
from pyflp import Parser
proj = Parser().parse("myflp.flp")Code: Select all (#)
proj.misc.tempo = 69.420Code: Select all (#)
print([ch.get_name() for ch in proj.channels])Code: Select all (#)
# Overwrite
proj.save()
# Save to a new location
proj.save("/path/to/newflp.flp")
Image-Line doesn't disclose much information about their format, all that is available is code from other similar projects I mention on the GitHub page. I don't take responsibility for any losses you face, do this at your own risk, keep a backup.
The FLP format is shit. I can write a long rant about it but it would be meaningless anyways. TLDR; Just notice how much space you can save by just zipping an FLP.
I have tested PyFLP only on some FL 20+ projects, FLPs saved with older version won't get parsed and will throw errors.
You might ask why not use FL Studio directly instead? You are not wrong, however once you save a project in a particular version of FL, you can't open it in old versions of FL. You might also want to automate something like organizing you FLPs into folders depending on certain information stored inside FLPs, like artist names, genre, title etc.
PyFLP @ GitHub: https://github.com/demberto/PyFLP (https://github.com/demberto/PyFLP) for installation and more info.