On Mon 11 Mar 02 17:42, you wrote:
> >There's another huge application for something like adiodiff (or more
> >generic, binary diff)
> >It will enable you to keep track of your adio workings in CVS, while
> > taking advantage of the full advantage of CVS, namely space-saving.
> > Editing on WAV files can be saved in CVS as a diff from the previous one.
>
> 1) if you can find one serious example of anyone who uses CVS for
>    binary files, i'd love to hear about it
>
> 2) in the DAW world, 90%+ of all "editing" doesn't involve any changes
>    to the data in the audio files.
>
> --p
Sorry about my methods not complying with the standards - I do a lot of 
cleaning up and applying transforms to waves before starting to assemble them 
in some kind of sequencer, multitracker, etc. Maybe I'm not in the DAW world, 
but I sure do enjoy making music ;-)
I'd say about 50% of all my editing involves changing the audio files, so I 
usually end up having a working directory like this:
        
        simonsloop01.wav
        simonsloop02.wav
        simonsloop03.wav
        simonsloop04.wav
        .
        .
        snerty01.wav
        .
        .
        .

I think you get the Idea!
THIS is what I'd like to use CVS for. (And, then of course, for all the 
versions of the sequencer/multitracker file that goes with it.).

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