Lucas wrote: > > wavs can act as samples for a mod file, but you can't convert .wav into .mod > but you could take samples and reproduce your "wav" using a tracker FYI Actually it was an .mp3 song before which I converted to a .wav which then I wished to convert it into a .mod because the software had an integrated mod player routine already. Well, I could make a rather minimal MOD file containing one *huge* sample containing all the WAV file data and a single play-a-note command - which would make the WAV file playable by the MOD player. Apart from that (which I presume isn't what I want), I'd need some fancy chunk of code that could filter out all the separate instruments that were playing - then do a spectral analysis on each one to figure out which notes were playing and when - and then extract appropriate waveforms for each instrument type. Sounds like science-fiction to me...but then I'm no audio engineer later Oliver -- Linux - dat beste Textadventure wo gibt ....I thought my wife was playing games on the computer, that was a BIG mistake...She is playing in front of the computer, with a BIG... eMail : [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- MP3 ENCODER mailing list ( http://geek.rcc.se/mp3encoder/ )
