Provided by: audacious_4.4.2-1_amd64 

NAME
audacious - an advanced audio player.
SYNOPSIS
audacious [option ...] [file ...]
DESCRIPTION
Audacious is a free advanced audio player for Linux and many other UNIX-compatible systems. It focuses
on low resource usage, high audio quality, and support for a wide range of audio formats. It was
originally based on Beep Media Player, which was in turn based on XMMS.
OPTIONS
Getting help:
-h, --help
Show a brief list of options.
Opening files:
-e, --enqueue
Add the files on the command line to the current playlist but do not start playback.
-E, --enqueue-to-temp
Add the files on the command line to the ``Now Playing'' playlist and start playback.
Controlling playback:
-p, --play
Start playback. If paused, playback will resume from the same point. If already active and not
paused, it will restart from the beginning of the song.
-u, --pause
Pause playback, or resume if already paused.
-t, --play-pause
Equivalent to --pause if playback is active, otherwise --play.
-s, --stop
Stop playback.
-r, --rew
Skip to the previous song in the playlist.
-f, --fwd
Skip to the next song in the playlist.
Miscellaneous:
-m, --show-main-window
Show the Audacious window if it is hidden and bring it to the top.
-j, --show-jump-box
Show the Jump to Song window.
-H, --headless
Start in command-line mode; i.e., without any graphical user interface.
-q, --quit-after-play
Exit as soon as playback stops, or immediately if there is nothing to play.
-v, --version
Print version information and exit.
-V, --verbose
Print debugging output while running (may be used twice for even more output).
-N, --new-instance
Starts a new instance. The second instance started may be controlled with audtool -2, the third
with audtool -3, etc. (up to 9 instances).
-G, --gtk
Start Audacious using the GTK+ interface.
-Q, --qt
Start Audacious using the Qt interface.
KEYBINDINGS
Control + Return Play
Space, Control + , Pause
Control + . Stop
Alt + Up Previous song
Alt + Down Next song
Right arrow Seek forward (by default 5 seconds)
Left arrow Seek backward (by default 5 seconds)
Escape Scroll to current song
Control + a Select all songs in playlist
Shift + Control + a Cancel selection
Control + + (plus) Increase volume 5 percent
Control + - (minus) Decrease volume 5 percent
Control + s Toggle shuffle
Control + r Toggle repeat
Control + n Toggle advancing in playlist
Control + m Toggle stopping after current song
Control + e Display Equalizer
Control + y Display Search Tool
Control + i Display Song Information dialog
Control + k Display Jump to Time dialog
Control + j Display Jump to Song dialog
Control + p Display Playlist Manager dialog
Control + u Display Queue Manager dialog
Control + o Display Open Files dialog
Shift + Control + o Display Add Files dialog
Control + l Display Open URL dialog
Shift + Control + l Display Add URL dialog
FILES
~/.config/audacious/config, ~/.config/audacious-2/config, etc.
Configuration file for each Audacious instance.
~/.config/audacious/playlists, ~/.config/audacious-2/playlists, etc.
Folders in which playlists are stored.
~/.local/share/audacious/Skins, share/audacious/Skins
Default locations where Audacious should look for skin files.
ENVIRONMENT
SKINSDIR Colon separated list of paths where Audacious should look for skin files.
TARCMD Tar command supporting GNU tar style decompression. Used for unpacking gzip and bzip2
compressed skins. Default is tar.
UNZIPCMD Command for decompressing zip files (skins). Default is unzip.
SEE ALSO
audtool(1)
WEBSITE
https://audacious-media-player.org
Version 4.4.2 May 2016 AUDACIOUS(1)