Mp3splt

Mp3splt
Developer(s) Mp3splt project team
Stable release 2.6.2 / November 10, 2014
Operating system Cross-platform
Type Digital audio splitter
License GNU General Public License
Website mp3splt.sourceforge.net

The Mp3splt project provides a set of an open-source digital audio splitter or cue splitter utilities to split mp3, ogg vorbis and FLAC files without decoding or recompressing. It runs on Linux, Mac OS X, and Microsoft Windows operating systems. The source code for mp3splt is released under the GNU General Public License. Mp3Splt is a command line utility, but the Mp3splt project has also created a library called Libmp3splt, and a graphical user interface called Mp3splt-gtk, based on Libmp3splt and GTK+ 3.

Mp3Splt can split MP3 (VBR supported), Ogg Vorbis and native FLAC files without decoding, thus avoiding digital generation loss (see also lossless editing). It can be used to split large MP3, Ogg Vorbis and native FLAC blocks to make smaller files or to split entire albums to obtain individual tracks.

To split an album, a user can select split points and filenames manually, or can get them automatically from CDDB, or from .CUE files. It also supports automatic silence split, that can be used also to adjust cddb/cue splitpoints. Additionally, it can quickly extract tracks from the files created, either with Mp3Wrap or AlbumWrap.

Mp3splt features

Its opposite (joining files) is Mp3Wrap or AlbumWrap.

Libmp3splt

Libmp3splt
Developer(s) Mp3splt project team
Stable release 0.9.2 / November 10, 2014
Operating system Cross-platform
Type Digital audio splitter
License GPL
Website mp3splt.sourceforge.net

Libmp3splt features

Mp3splt-gtk

Mp3splt-gtk

Mp3splt-gtk v0.7.3
Developer(s) Mp3splt project team
Stable release 0.9.2 / November 10, 2014
Operating system Cross-platform
Type Digital audio splitter
License GPL
Website mp3splt.sourceforge.net

Mp3splt-gtk features

See also

References

    This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, April 28, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.