No it’s not the latest version of FFmpeg. Is that the current, latest, stable ver? in the command window when u make an ALAC, it looks like its from 2010/2011. I installed whatever ver the audacity DL buttons in the prefs sent me to, which looks like 0.6.2 What is the version of FFmpeg I should be using? If after importing a 48000 Hz FLAC you changed the project rate to back to 44100 Hz and imported another 48000 Hz FLAC, the project rate would remain at 44100 Hz. (maybe it has something to do with how things were the last time I used Audacity, or the upgrade I did to 2.0.5 from 2.0.3 I believe)Īs I said, if the file you import is the first file in that project window, then the project rate should change to the rate of the file if not already set at that file’s rate. I don’t use audio editing much, but i’ll try to keep an eye out from now on. What I can’t explain then, is why my initial FLACs were 44.1? they were, but how that happened I have no idea, as I know I didn’t mess around with the prefs or project rate until AFTER making that initial FLAC.īut if I can’t figure out the steps to reproduce, I can’t prove the bug. on wav import and export to flac, the whole thing went at 48khz automatically, even after I changed the default rate in prefs to 44.1 Hmm, I just did an experiment and I can’t reproduce. So it would seem Audacity has a small bug, if its supposed to match the files sample rate on import. I then got your post, and on my own, saw the project rate dropbox, set it to 48khz, and imported the wavs. I imported to audacity and first made FLACs, and later noticed the FLACs were 44.1 My wav’s are 48khz b/c they are from DVD. The project rate should change to the rate of the imported file unless you already have another track present. I was able to import my wav from DVD to audacity natively at 48khz (by first setting it as the project rate prior to import)
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