Difference between revisions of "WAVE"

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(Add wikilinks and change the command: -vvv is now -vv)
m (Undo revision 59460 by DoesItReallyMatter (talk))
 
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  {{%}} {{font colour|grey|vlc}} -I dummy -vv {{font colour|green|"input.mp3"}} --sout=#transcode{acodec={{font colour|red|s16l}},channels=2,ab={{font colour|purple|128}},samplerate=44100}:standard{access=file,mux=wav,dst={{font colour|blue|"output.wav"}}} vlc://quit
 
  {{%}} {{font colour|grey|vlc}} -I dummy -vv {{font colour|green|"input.mp3"}} --sout=#transcode{acodec={{font colour|red|s16l}},channels=2,ab={{font colour|purple|128}},samplerate=44100}:standard{access=file,mux=wav,dst={{font colour|blue|"output.wav"}}} vlc://quit
  
Where on Windows you need to add installation directory in front of {{font colour|grey|vlc}} (by default "%PROGRAMFILES%\VideoLAN\VLC\{{font colour|grey|vlc}}").
+
Where on Windows you need to add installation directory in front of {{font colour|grey|vlc}} (by default {{font colour|grey|{{Path to VLC|windows|dir=y}}}}).
  
 
As {{font colour|red|audio codec (acodec)}} you can specify one of the above mentioned ones. The [[bitrate]] of the output file is specified by the {{font colour|purple|ab}} parameter.
 
As {{font colour|red|audio codec (acodec)}} you can specify one of the above mentioned ones. The [[bitrate]] of the output file is specified by the {{font colour|purple|ab}} parameter.

Latest revision as of 23:20, 14 March 2019

wav
VLC can encode and decode this container.
The module name to use at the command line is wav.

WAVE is a way of storing audio, which is normally uncompressed. It is based on RIFF. Note that wav isn't a streamable audio format, so you can only stream it using RTP (to stream it otherwise, transcode it to something that's streamable).

Accepted audio codecs

  • dummy: Uncompressed audio of various types, based on storing integer values of the amplitude of the sound (see PCM).
  • fl32: Floating point 32-bit uncompressed audio, also based on PCM but allowing the values to be stored as floating point data types. This can give better quality audio when the sound becomes quiet.

Converting to WAVE

The command-line for converting any readable input file to a WAVE audio file is the following:

% vlc -I dummy -vv "input.mp3" --sout=#transcode{acodec=s16l,channels=2,ab=128,samplerate=44100}:standard{access=file,mux=wav,dst="output.wav"} vlc://quit

Where on Windows you need to add installation directory in front of vlc (by default "%PROGRAMFILES%\VideoLAN\VLC").

As audio codec (acodec) you can specify one of the above mentioned ones. The bitrate of the output file is specified by the ab parameter.

Source code