Hi Clive,
> > > First of all, removing the space between the individual pids has
> > > worked. This is odd because in the past, when I use the five
> > > digit number to download multiple programs I just leave a space
> > > between them, eg:
> > >
> > > get_iplayer 12345 12346 12347 12348 12349 -g
> >
> > Those `five digit number' are indexes, not PIDs. The --pid option
> > does not change the meaning of arguments from indexes to PIDs; it
> > takes a single argument that is a comma-separated list of PIDs.
>
> My experience is that if I enter the index numbers with each of five
> digits separated by a space then it works, always. Try it on something
> short like Tweet of the Day:
No, I don't need to try it. I keep agreeing with you! :-)
And you didn't ask about index numbers, but about PIDs. Please re-read
what I've written.
You are mixing up an index and a PID, `10302' v. `b0bg2ctf'. They are
not the same thing and get_iplayer does not take an argument and work
out which it is. It has to be an index unless it is the argument
following --pid when it can be a comma-separated list of PIDs.
These are the equivalent forms, given my index values here.
10299 10300 10301
--pid b0bbbzr2,b0bcmpgb,b0bg2ctf
--
Cheers, Ralph.
https://plus.google.com/+RalphCorderoy
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