By the way, could anyone else who has used the --seektable option chime in here with your experience? I have not seen any other replies to Neil's questions, and it seems like he really needs more help that I can offer.
Brian On Nov 16, 2010, at 14:45, Brian Willoughby wrote: > I do not understand why you are giving up. If you have "specific > times" then why can't you convert that to seconds or samples? It's > just simple math to calculate the translation. Also, I assume that > you can use the option more than once if you have more than one track > marker to place. > > Have you even tried this once? I don't think your GUI will work - > you need to use the command line. > > On Nov 16, 2010, at 03:37, Neil Wilkes wrote: >> Well, I must be the world's biggest fool - after looking at the >> help files for the version I just got from the FLAC download links, >> all I can see for seektable is to specify these points in samples >> or every "x" seconds. >> I cannot see how to do this from a 24-bit source file that has >> specific times where I need to add a track marker. >> I also see no way at all to specify any track from the list on >> playback. >> BTW - the GUI front end I use came from the same installation as >> the main FLAC files, and I got those from the website. >> I am not using any odd front ends except this one, and this one >> blatantly does not do what I need. >> >> I think I will just give up on this. >> (Whilst I am aware of how to access command line tools, I try to >> avoid this as I am not that literate and simply do not have the >> time to learn it. If it cannot be done from a simple dialogue where >> I point the encoder at the source and tell it I need markers here, >> here & here, then it is too complex for a simple mix engineer like >> me) >> >> Thanks for your help. _______________________________________________ Flac mailing list [email protected] http://lists.xiph.org/mailman/listinfo/flac
