waxcylinder wrote:it's a long read
There is a more digestible précis on the Wiki:
http://wiki.audacityteam.org/wiki/Bug:137
rjc90 wrote:I have version 1.3 Beta of Audacity
Sorry you had a problem. Please look at Help > About Audacity and tell us the exact thee section version number you have (for example, 1.3.13). If you don't have the current 1.3.13, please upgrade:
http://audacityteam.org/download/beta_windows
rjc90 wrote:I created a copy of the original file and began editing the copy.
Please tell us exactly what steps you took after you stopped recording. Do you mean you did File > Save Project?
If you saved a project and made a copy of that, what file or folder exactly did you copy? If you did a second File > Save Project As, so that you have two separately named projects, did you have them open at the same time in Audacity? If so, can you open the original copy of the project?
rjc90 wrote:
I saved my progress, exited the program and later, when I tried to open the same file, a window appeared saying as follows:
"Project check detected 83 missing audio data (.au) blockfile(s), probably due to a bug, system crash or accidental deletion. There is no way for Audacity to recover these missing files automatically."
If you have two projects open at the same time, Audacity can save the .au files in the wrong project. If that happened, the missing files in this project will be stated as "orphans" in the other project. So don't delete any orphan files that are reported in other projects. You can look at Help > Show Log to get the names of the missing files and search your computer for them (as Edgar said).
rjc90 wrote: I have not deleted any files nor has my computer crashed recently.
OK, so there is no autorecovery involved, because there was no crash.
waxcylinder wrote:1.3 Audacity should auto-recover for you on start-up (unless you tell/told it not to).
In the current 1.3.13 Beta, the Autosave option in the Directories Preferences has been removed so there is no way to turn it off. That will continue to be the case in future releases.
rjc90 wrote:
I'm attempting to piece together all of the separate audio files from the folder containing the data which is still in tact.
If this is a mono recording and you did not edit it before the problem occurred, you can resort the .au files into timestamp order, rename them then use an automatic utility to recover them. See the green panel on this page:
http://wiki.audacityteam.org/wiki/Crash ... very_tools
However as there was no crash I wonder what the purpose of piecing together the files is? If the missing files are correctly reported and no other corruption has occurred, then you should have the .au files in the _data folder in the correct order already - the only problem should be gaps in the audio. Are there gaps in playback or the waveform? If so, is the audio that is still there in the correct order? In that case your only task is to find where the missing audio files are and put them back in the correct subfolder in the _data folder for the project.
The fourth numeric character in the filename of the .au file (for example, a "2" in a file named e0002937.au)
tells you the "d" subfolder that file should be in. So the e0002932.au file should be in the "d02" folder for Audacity to find it.
Gale