I'm not sure if this is already a thing or not but the ability to open audio files in a external editor would be killer. If I didn't, I'd be forced to categorize all 50+ of them, because I'm really testy about organization! Only annoying this is that after installation, all of Sound Forge's DirectX Audio Plug-ins show up as "Uncategorized" in CbB… They're usable, but generally I just disable them in Cakewalk with the Plug-In Manager. Sound Forge Pro 12 can be gotten off Humble Bundle for $25, so anyone in need of a Wave Editor should jump on that deal. You can probably set a keyboard shortcut to the entry you add to the tools menu, though. I wish Cakewalk would add context menus to Audio Events to open them up in a configured audio editor. contrary to Sound Forge).Īudacity is basically Reaper with 1/20th of the development resources/attention □ This is more comparable to what a DAW does (for example, opening up an Audio File in Samplitude creates a Waveform Project for that file, instead of editing it directly (and destructively) by default. dialog in Audacity, because the Project is New. and use the same location and file name, then overwrite it - if possible. When you go back to the DAW or NLE, they automatically load the edited file and regenerate the waveform.Īudacity, basically, creates a "New Project" when you open an Audio File, so the only way to save over the original file is to Save As. Most DAWs and NLEs have settings to release file locks when they lose focus, so that this workflow can be enabled. They open the source file directly, the way Notepad opens up a Text document. This is the common workflow when using them in conjunction with a DAW or NLE. will work out of the box, because they allow you to just Open and Save to overwrite the source file (destructive by default). Wave Editors like Sound Forge, WaveLab, WavePad, etc. It works in Projects, like a DAW, and not directly on the file like a destructive wave editor. That's likely due to how Audacity works with Audio Files. Not as good as Audacity so I may look into Soundforge. Yea, couldn't seem to get Audacity to work (very disappointed) but was able to get WavePad.
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