Improvements to export multiple and batch processing
Posted: Fri Mar 07, 2014 7:53 pm
I'm doing a language documentation project, and it entails a lot of file editing, like batch processing 150 hours or recordings, getting them all to a good volume (some are quiet) and exporting copies as mp3s. I'm using 2.0.5. on windows 7. I then transcribe the files, import the labels into audacity, and export each transcribed sentence as a separate file using export multiple. Audacity has been giving me some problems, the biggest being the following.
The problems are this -First - when I go to export a lot of my files to mp3, it pauses after each and every single file an says that the lame encoder doesn't support the bitrate, would I like to change it**. *Of course I'd like to!* But what I'd really like is if I didn't have to click yes, literally five hundred times, each time separated by one to five minutes. Is there any way that I can say "yes to all future questions"? As it is, it's virtually un-usable when I have to be at the computer with audacity open, clicking yes every five minutes for a day. The second problem is almost the same. When exporting multiple files from single recordings, it forces me to confirm that I indeed want the file to be what the transcription is, and it forces me to do it every single time. I routinely have 300 transcriptions per file, and I have to sit and click ENTER ENTER ENTER ENTER ENTER x 300, 400 times. It needs to be possible to accept a default chain of actions, rather than have to re-affirm the same thing over and over again for hours. By the time I'm done this project I'll have 45,000 transcribed sentences, and maybe five hundred hours of .wav files, which will need batch processing. Either I figure out how to *actually* automate this work in audacity (which I know it can do) or I have to find a different program.
My only other problem is figuring out how to do the equivalent of auto-level with batch processing, but that I suspect is just a matter of figuring out the right combination of normalize and amplify, and doesn't require a new feature.
The problems are this -First - when I go to export a lot of my files to mp3, it pauses after each and every single file an says that the lame encoder doesn't support the bitrate, would I like to change it**. *Of course I'd like to!* But what I'd really like is if I didn't have to click yes, literally five hundred times, each time separated by one to five minutes. Is there any way that I can say "yes to all future questions"? As it is, it's virtually un-usable when I have to be at the computer with audacity open, clicking yes every five minutes for a day. The second problem is almost the same. When exporting multiple files from single recordings, it forces me to confirm that I indeed want the file to be what the transcription is, and it forces me to do it every single time. I routinely have 300 transcriptions per file, and I have to sit and click ENTER ENTER ENTER ENTER ENTER x 300, 400 times. It needs to be possible to accept a default chain of actions, rather than have to re-affirm the same thing over and over again for hours. By the time I'm done this project I'll have 45,000 transcribed sentences, and maybe five hundred hours of .wav files, which will need batch processing. Either I figure out how to *actually* automate this work in audacity (which I know it can do) or I have to find a different program.
My only other problem is figuring out how to do the equivalent of auto-level with batch processing, but that I suspect is just a matter of figuring out the right combination of normalize and amplify, and doesn't require a new feature.