pasting from backup
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Audacity 1.3.x is now obsolete. Please use the current Audacity 2.1.x version.
The final version of Audacity for Windows 98/ME is the legacy 2.0.0 version.
Audacity 1.3.x is now obsolete. Please use the current Audacity 2.1.x version.
The final version of Audacity for Windows 98/ME is the legacy 2.0.0 version.
pasting from backup
I accidentally removed one track in an audacity recording. No problem as I had made a backup of the file. I selected the track, copied it, went to the file w/ the missing track, added a new audio track, placed my cursor in it, hit contr+V, and an error message said, "pasting one type of track into another is not allowed." Since they are both audio tracks, I'm baffled. Maybe it has something to do w/ not also adding the requisite data files? But if it did, how would I know which ones they are, easily and quickly?
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billw58
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Re: pasting from backup
Is one a stereo track and the other a mono track?
-- Bill
-- Bill
Re: pasting from backup
Bill, thank you so much for your quick reply. No, they are both mono, as one was an exact copy of the other. I did go and check, and they are mono.
Re: pasting from backup
I had the same problem just recently. I eventually figured out my error but cannot recall the solution.
What I would suggest is to save each correct segment a a separate audio file (in the same lossless format -- like WAV) then use menu File > Import > Audio on each to bring them both into the Project where you should be able to edit them together as needed.
What I would suggest is to save each correct segment a a separate audio file (in the same lossless format -- like WAV) then use menu File > Import > Audio on each to bring them both into the Project where you should be able to edit them together as needed.
Re: pasting from backup
There are 14 tracks in the file I'm working on and 15 in the copy (because I accidentally removed one). And except for the one that is lost and some work I am doing on one other track, all the other tracks are identical. So are you saying to only select the track that I lost as a wav and then import it into the project? Can we only save one track in audacity?
Re: pasting from backup
In the picture below, there is a single Project with 4 mono tracks, a stereo track and a Label track. The stereo track is a (make believe) rip from a CD which has 3 tracks--song 1, song 2, and song 3. If by "track" above you ask if this whole mess can only be saved as one track, the answer is a qualified "Yes", it can be saved as either a mono or stereo track which is composed of all the audio. If however you are asking if song 1, song 2 etc. can each be saved separately then the answer is again a qualified "Yes". Unfortunately, the real answer depends on the meaning of "track" and "save"! Audacity has a very narrow definition of both "track" (a GUI combination of a Track Control Panel plus the associated waveform box) and "save" (Audacity "saves" only in its own internal format--a format which can NOT be played by any other application nor CD player). If you want to "save" a few "tracks" such that they are suitable for creating a CD or playlist then you must Export in the appropriate file format (WAV, MP3 etc.).DrDebH wrote:There are 14 tracks in the file I'm working on and 15 in the copy (because I accidentally removed one). And except for the one that is lost and some work I am doing on one other track, all the other tracks are identical. So are you saying to only select the track that I lost as a wav and then import it into the project? Can we only save one track in audacity?
So, now the questions become, are your "tracks" a bunch of mono tracks stacked one on top of the other (as in the mono tracks above) or more like the stereo track with a bunch of labeled sections; and, are you trying to create a single file with them all meshed (as a bunch of instruments playing one song at the same time) or a bunch of separate tunes like a CD?