Ingo, did you have any luck on this throughout the year? I'm also curious on this. Anyway, I had another thread here and someone suggested http://loopauditioneer.sourceforge.net/ that seems to read loop points - but I can't test it because it's linux
Em qua., 12 de fev. de 2020 às 05:39, Ingo <[email protected]> escreveu: > There are softwares like AwaveStudio that do nothing else but format > conversion between different sampler formats that can handle the loop > points > as well. > > > > I have been working with hardware samplers since the 80ies and used > > (mainly) softwares like SoundForge or Wavelab for looping. > > There was no extra file. All hardware samplers could read the loops. > Once a > > file was looped with one sampler it would be looped with the next one. > > Same thing with modern software Samplers like Kontakt. > > I can use a sample that I looped in Wavelab and load it into SoundForge > and > > it > > recognizes the loops. > > (There are options for multiple loops, though that might not work with > some > > samplers.) > > > > It can't be such a secret since over 30 years that all manufacturers > > (software > > or hardware) know about it but noone else. > > I have been looking around but couldn't find any information where the > > loops are stored in the file but they definitely are. > > > > Ingo > > > > > > > -----Original Message----- > > > From: Pd-list [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Roman > > > Haefeli > > > Sent: Wednesday, February 12, 2020 8:48 AM > > > To: [email protected] > > > Subject: Re: [PD] Sample loop - start and end point (WAV files) > > > > > > On Tue, 2020-02-11 at 21:22 -0800, Alexandre Torres Porres wrote: > > > > Well, I was really really hoping to see information here on how to > > > > get loop points from these files ;) > > > > > > I looked around for specifications of the .wav-format and I wasn't > > > able to find one that looks canonical. The ones I found didn't mention > > > any loop start- and endpoints. I wonder whether there is a convention > > > about how to encode this into some sort of metadata stored with file. > > > Some description of the format describe the ability to store anything > > > as metdata. Personally, I never dealt with such files (at least not > > > knowingly). Maybe a good start would be to provide such a file, so > > > that people can a have a look at it. It might be not that difficult to > > > retrieve such data with something like mrpeach's [binfile], once you > know > > how it is stored. > > > > > > > > > Roman > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > [email protected] mailing list > UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> > https://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list >
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