On Tue, 2010-03-30 at 01:30 +0200, Hartmut Noack wrote: > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > Am 29.03.2010 18:20, schrieb Mac McIlvaine: > > > > > Can you actually do destructive editing with Ardour at this point? > > > De facto you can. Once your edits and effects are to your liking, you > can select a part of your audiotrack with the selection-tool and > rightklick->consolidate with plugins. > > I use a german version of Ardour so I do not really know, if the words > are correct but as a matter of fact you can make Ardour write a new file > that holds all your edits and FX and that replaces the former recording > in the track. > > This I would consider pretty nearish to reall destructive editig. Still > Ardour lacks some important offline-Tools like note-detection and most > important: noise reduction. For these things I open Sonic Visualizer and > Audacity... > > best regs >
Hi from the Ardour web page: Non-destructive, non-linear editing with unlimited undo What you describe above is indeed modifying the recording, I don't believe it is considered "destructive" editing. Audacity will allow the wave form to be edited on a per sample basis, actually changing the value of the sample at will. I believe this is considered "destructive" editing. I would be happy to be wrong, but I don't think Ardour allows such detailed editing of the raw data. Regards, Mac -- Ubuntu-Studio-users mailing list [email protected] Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-studio-users
