Difference between revisions of "MP3"

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(somehow the shown cmd didn't work for me, this one does though)
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An example of this at the [[command prompt]] is:
 
An example of this at the [[command prompt]] is:
  {{%}} vlc "''input_file''" :no-video :[[sout]]='#[[transcode]]{acodec=mp3,ab=128}:[[std]]{access=file,mux=dummy,url="''out_file.mp3''"}'
+
  {{%}} vlc "''input_file''" :no-video :sout=#transcode{acodec=mp3,ab=128}:duplicate{dst=std{access=file,mux=dummy,dst="''out_file.mp3''"}}
  
 
== External Links ==
 
== External Links ==
 
* [http://www.tnt.uni-hannover.de/project/mpeg/audio/faq/mpeg1.html MPEG 1 Audio FAQ] for details on the differences between the layers.
 
* [http://www.tnt.uni-hannover.de/project/mpeg/audio/faq/mpeg1.html MPEG 1 Audio FAQ] for details on the differences between the layers.

Revision as of 13:12, 30 July 2007

mp3
This is an audio codec. The name to use at the command line is mp3.
This codec can be used inside the dummy (raw), mpeg, avi, matroska and mp4 containers.
This codec is from the ffmpeg module.

MP3 is a popular type of audio compression described by the MPEG-1 specification (MP3's full name is MPEG-1 Layer 3 Audio).

VLC can play and create MP3 files.

Creating mp3 files

Note: If you try to create mp3 files it probably won't use the best compression techniques! A better alternative is to use the LAME MP3 encoder.

You can make mp3 files by using the mp3 audio codec. .mp3 files do not have a container, so you should use the dummy container. You should also specify the --no-video option if you're taking audio from a video.

An example of this at the command prompt is:

% vlc "input_file" :no-video :sout=#transcode{acodec=mp3,ab=128}:duplicate{dst=std{access=file,mux=dummy,dst="out_file.mp3"}} 

External Links