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| -rw-r--r-- | README.md | 26 | 
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 9 deletions
| @@ -7,19 +7,27 @@ This tool takes a list of times (mm:ss:ff) from stdin and (blindly) outputs file  **It will overwrite any existing file with the same name** -Warning -------- -Try running `grep -i FIXME *.c` +Usage +----- + +	Options: +	  -r bitrate_Hz +	  -c channel_count +	  -i input_file +	  -s size of a single channel's sample (bytes) +	  -f name_format (%d and co are replaced with track number)  Sample Usage  ------------ -Assuming you want to use the first indices of each track as a boundary, +Assuming you want to use the first indices of each track as a boundary and were chopping up a 44100 Hz, two channel, 16 bit audio stream, -	grep "INDEX 01" cue-file | \ +	grep "INDEX 01" audio.cue | \  	  sed -e 's/INDEX 01//g' | \ -	  cue-bin-split raw-file channels samples-rate bytes-per-sample name-format +	  cue-bin-split -i audio.bin -c 2 -r 44100 -s 2 -f track-%03d.raw + +Would output each track named as `track-001.raw`, `track-002.raw` and so on. + +You might then push them through ffmpeg, lame, and/or friends to get them to another audio format such as flac or mp3. -Where format is something like `track_%04d`. -This will output a bunch of files named accordingly. -You might then push them through ffmpeg or something to get them to another audio format. +Or if you're feeling high on disc space, just prepend a WAV header to the PCM data… | 
