Re: BatchProcessing Files on Windows

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Thanks for the reply. I am using windows 10 command prompt. Maybe not optimal but It’s kind of hard to know

which one to use if your not an experienced programmer. I have Git Bash, is this is what you mean? But I don’t use it

because I can’t get the set audiodriver to work as I could in the command prompt. In cmd.exe this is the first thing I do

set audiodriver=waveaudio and I am ready to go. I guess there is a simple way to set up this from bash but

I havn’t found any answer. The amount of questions quickly escalates

 

When I ran your first script inside bash it didn’t work

Just to make things clear:

I ran this inside of Git Bash from a chosen folder set as my cd

I also have to create a new folder within in this cd with mkdir?

 

Then I’ll use for F in *.wav ; do

    sox $F -b 8 nameoffolder/$F

done

 

But It doesn’t work

 

But It would be nice to run it inside Command Prompt in windows 10. 

I have been using sox in with cmd.exe because it worked for but most information I find using sox is on Linux

So maybe I should switch..

 

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

From: Jeff Learman
Sent: Wednesday, 27 May 2020 02:23
To: sox-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: BatchProcessing Files on Windows

 

For the first question, I'll let the devs answer, but apparently sox doesn't batch.

 

For the second question, that's not a sox issue; it's a scripting question.  What shell are you using?  For bash:

 

for F in *.wav ; do

    sox $F -b 8 mydir/$F

done

 

I'm guessing you use Windows CLI?  For that I'd use this: https://ss64.com/nt/for2.html -- so it looks like you just need %% instead of %, and a backslash between the dir name and the wave file name.

 

Jeff

 

 

 

 

On Tue, 26 May 2020 at 18:31, Nils Wallgren <affarer@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

I have some problems getting these things to work:

 

1 I want the duration of a couple of soundfiles in a directory

 

sox --i -D kick_*.wav

 

the name of the sound files are kick_1.wav, kick_2.wav, kick_3.wav etc

but it doesn’t work with the wildcard.

 

2 If I want to batch process a couple of files in a directory and process/convert them to something else

And put the processed files in a new folder, how do I do that?

 

for %i in *.wav do sox "%i" -b 8  "n_%i" .flac

 

(also not sure of the conversion of the files when batching)

 

Best,

 

Sent from Mail for Windows 10

 

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