mp\_suggest is a simple little organizational tool for MP3 collections. I wrote it a few years ago to help me organize my own collection, and when the Hy Programming Language came out, I decided it was time for a minor exercise. Rewriting mp\_suggest in Hy was a perfect opportunity. mp\_suggest does *not* alter your MP3 files; instead, it prints to stdout a simple bash script that invokes the command-line program id3v2; you can capture that script and run it by hand, or pipe the output of mp\_suggest through sed to make changes on the fly, or just run the output straight into bash with a unix pipe. Writing mp\_suggest was an interesting exercise in returning to Lisp after all these years. I find that I really enjoyed it (although, honestly, Hy's debugging facilities leave a lot to be desired). The style used inside mp\_suggest is most definitely not Lispy; looking through it, with its persistent use of cheap anonymous functions and closures and its function-level metaprogramming, I guess the best language I could compare it to is Coffeescript. I like Coffeescript a lot, but I don't get many opportunities to use it professionally, but the sensibilities of Coffeescript (especially Reginald Braithwaite's Ristrettology and his other books on functional programming) heavily influenced the design decisions I made in mp_suggest. * Licensing This program is released under the terms of the GNU General Public License (GNU GPL). You can find a copy of the license in the file COPYING. * Using: mp_suggest comes with a complete list of commands that can be seen by running the command with no arguments. See the man page that comes with it. * To do: The TODO file is empty for a reason. This was mostly an exercise in writing Hy.