The individual tunes are in files with names of the form VPPPN_Title.abc, where the pieces of the name are:

HUTB means Hamilton's Universal Tune-Book.
b is the book's volume number (1 or 2).
yyyy is the year of publication (1844 or 1846).
Vv is the ABC version, V1 for ABC 1.7 and V2 for ABC 2.1.
Titleis the tune's title, modified for ease of software use by using the common form with '_' instead of spaces, other punctuation dropped, and Upper_and_Lower_Case letters used in the common English title fashion.

The tunes have numbers, but the minuets and dance tunes are both numbered 1-12, which is used for the X: value but isn't used in the file name because it isn't unique or useful for the sequential order. There are a few files just named VPPPN_.abc, with no title; they are placeholders for parts of tunes placed on a second page, to indicate that the music was transcribed but is in the earlier file.

The titles in this collection are mostly upper case, though a few contain some words in lower case (mostly in parentheses). Capitalization in the file names matches current practice: important words are capitalized, words like articles and common prepositions are all lower case. Initial articles are omitted in file names but are present in tunes' T: lines, in lower case to match the occasional practice that makes it easy for software to ignore them.

Some of the music in this collection has notation which not all ABC software (or modern musicians) understands properly. For these tunes, two transcriptions may be present: The "-V2" version has the ABC 2.0 notation, typically proofread with the abcm2ps formatter. The "-V1" version is restricted to ABC 1.7 features, and may entail some rewriting or omission of unrepresentable annotations, typically proofread using the last abc2ps formatter, or its jcabc2ps clone. Also, the -V1 versions have '-' after the initial 5 digits, while the -V2 versions have '='. This is to make it easier to distinguish them in file-name patterns, such as are used in the Makefile. You may want to strip off the initial digits and the [-_=] characters, to get just the title as the file name.

Few of the tunes in this collection have attributions, and the cotillion tunes rarely have titles. Some tunes are well known, and occasionally the modern titles are added as subtitles. Howe may have been the composer of some of the tunes, but we don't really know.