Paul Winkler wrote: > On Tue, Jul 31, 2007 at 10:25:34PM +0200, Marc-Olivier Barre wrote: >> I been thinking of the same thing... can't ardour handle FLAC files >> natively ? > > Nope.
I only meant natively reading them. On 8/1/07, Stefan Kost <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> a simple script in <you-name-it> language calling flac to > >> to compress the audio and change the session file to match the new > >> names should work I think. > >> > >> Thoughts anyone ? > > > > That'd be nice but as I said earlier, FLAC can't handle Ardour's wav > > files: > > > > [EMAIL PROTECTED] sounds $ flac Audio\ 1-1.wav > > > > flac 1.1.2, Copyright (C) 2000,2001,2002,2003,2004,2005 Josh Coalson > > flac comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. This is free software, and > > you are > > welcome to redistribute it under certain conditions. Type `flac' for > > details. > > > > options: -P 4096 -b 4608 -m -l 8 -q 0 -r 3,3 > > Audio 1-1.wav: ERROR: unsupported compression type 3 > > Seems that ardor uses WAVE_FORMAT_IEEE_FLOAT and flac can only do pcm. > http://flac.sourceforge.net/faq.html#general__samples > That make flac not idea for that purpose. If one still wants to do that, > gstreamer could do the converion and en/decoding. Well if FLAC can be read by ardour directly, gstreamer is not such a bother... I can include that in my script. Paul Winkler wrote: > > But as pointed out earlier in the thread, wavpack is open source and > > it seems to work. I'll give a try to wavpack too and tell you how things went. _________________ Marc-Olivier Barre. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/linux-audio-dev
