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tuatara

tuatara is a text-mode music player, written in Python.

Description

tuatara plays local music files. It can play single files, or play an entire music library.

Features

  • Simple keyboard controls
  • Shuffle mode
  • Basic playlist support via .m3u files
  • Integrated cover art display
  • Dynamic background color
  • Visualization support

tuatara is not intended for interactive browsing of your library; tell it what to play, and it plays it.

Screenshot

Screenshot

Usage

To start with tuatara, just pass a file, directory of music files, or a URL on the commandline.

Example:

tuatara /path/to/my/music/library /path/to/some/other/files

You can pass multiple files or directories to play on the command line.

Controls

tuatara is controlled by the keyboard. Basic keys are:

  • Space bar: toggle Play/Pause
  • 'p', PageUp: Previous track
  • 'n', PageDown: Next track
  • 'm': Toggle mute
  • 'h', '?': Show full keybindings
  • 'q': Quit

Controls are not case-sensitive.

For more comprehensive documentation on features, usage, controls, and configuration, see the manual.

Requirements and installation

System requirements:

  • Python >= 3.11
  • GStreamer (with appropriate plugins)
  • GObject-introspection

Python requirements:

  • PyGObject
  • Pillow
  • urllib3
  • m3u8
  • blessed

tuatara can be installed from the Releases page on GitHub.

Download and install the .whl file with pip, or download and use the pex file for your system's python interpreter.

tuatara is only tested on Linux. macOS or Windows may theoretically work.

Development

When submitting changes:

  • Please add tests in tests/ if it is a testable change
  • Ensure code passes both lint and formatting with ruff (https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/)

License & Credits

tuatara is licensed under the GPL, version 3.0 or later.

Python ASCII art implementation inspired and cribbed from ascii-wizard and artem.

Why 'tuatara'?

The tuatara is a reptile, native to New Zealand. It is the sole surviving member of the Rhynchocephalia order; its lineage split from modern snakes and lizards well over 200 million years ago.

Hence, despite existing to this day, it appears to be a relic of a far bygone era. Much like this software.