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1 second silent mp3 file
1 second silent mp3 file






1 second silent mp3 file

Quote from: Porcus on 21:58:46 CD-audio does not have wav files - indeed it does not have files! Assuming that this was not a data CD, I can only make a hunch that your software presents it as if it were.

#1 second silent mp3 file how to

I've searched all over the net for examples of how to do this with lame, but not a word, and every code example I've found just uses one. But mp3wrap has its annoyances, so I'd rather have lame encode and wrap the wav files all at once. Now, I know how to use mp3wrap, so I could use lame to create three mp3 files and then wrap them. I played the mp3 file and it sounded great.

1 second silent mp3 file

So then I tried just 'lame -V 0 1.wav 1.mp3' and it worked like a champ. 'OK,' I thought, 'maybe I need commas between the file names.' That didn't work, nor did + or a couple other characters. The first three were tracks for a concerto, so I dragged them to a blank folder and renameed them as 1.wav, 2.wav and3.wav, changed the command line to the folder, and typed 'lame -V 0 1.wav 2.wav 3.wav concerto.mp3.' This errored out as '3.wav is unneeded argument.' So after several more tries I discovered that lame was ignoring anything but the first. I popped a new CD into the drive and, amazingly, there were nine tracks on it already as. wav files and then lame with VBR to encode them. Not a big deal, I can remember parts of it. Well, now I've bought some new CDs to expand my collection, but after scouring my computer for the instructions I can't find them. Whenever I learn how to do something from the command line it is my custom to write up the process and save it in a text file because I know that when I need to do it again years later I won't remember. Fifteen years ago I used a brand new Ubuntu computer with cdparanoa and lame to encode my hundreds of classical CDs to mp3 files, and I've been happily listening to them ever since.








1 second silent mp3 file