set "BASE=%~dp0" set "TSUBGET=%BASE%\tSubGetc.exe" for %%f in (*.wtv) do ( "%TSUBGET%" -k "%%f" ) Stick that in a .bat file (save it in the same location as tsubget) and run it from the same folder as your WTVs. As for detecting new WTV files, as you've mentioned, running on a scheduler is probably the easiest. E.g. use the task scheduler to do this, just make sure it starts in the same folder as your WTVs.
set "BASE=%~dp0" set "TSUBGET=%BASE%\tSubGetc.exe" for %%f in (*.wtv) do ( "%TSUBGET%" -k "%%f" ) Stick that in a .bat file and run it from the same folder as your WTVs. As for detecting new WTV files, as you've mentioned, running on a scheduler is probably the easiest. E.g. use the task scheduler to do this, just make sure it starts in the same folder as your WTVs.
To be honest, you could probably get around it with some scripting (e.g. here), but here, try this: https://sourceforge.net/projects/tsubget/files/tSubGet-0.9.7 Not tested, so ymmv. Pass -k to skip if it exists.
Using the build script
Precompiled mingw-w64 X11 libraries
Precompiled mingw-w64 X11 libraries
Thanks Rui that worked - what a lifesaver!
Precompiled mingw-w64 X11 libraries