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Recursively.
29 lines
1.0 KiB
Plaintext
29 lines
1.0 KiB
Plaintext
# Minimal example of converting a wave file to MP3
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lame input.wav output.mp3
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# Re-encode existing MP3 to 64 kbps MP3
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lame -b 64 original.mp3 new.mp3
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# Encode with variable bitrate (quality=2)
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# 0 <= quality <= 9 (default = 4). 0 = highest quality
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lame -V2 original.wav compressed.mp3
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# More interesting options
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# -m m: save as mono
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# -m s: save as stereo
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# -m j: save as joint stereo (exploits inter-channel correlation
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# more than regular stereo)
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# -q 2: quality tweaking: the lower the value, the better the
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# quality, but the slower the algorithm. Default is 5.
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#
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# By default, lame uses constant bit rate (CBR) encoding.
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# You can also use average bit rate (ABR) encoding,
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# e.g. for an average bit rate of 123 kbps:
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lame --abr 123 input.wav output.mp3
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# Variable (VBR) encoding, e.g. between 32 kbps and 192 kbps:
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lame -v -b 32 -B 192 input.wav output.mp3
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# Recode all wav files in all subdirectories
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find . -type d -exec sh -c '(cd {} && for i in *.wav; do lame -h -b 128 "$i" "`basename "$i" .wav`".mp3; done)' ';'
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