Will Godfrey, Sep 19 2015:
> I have about 150 uncompressed audio files that I want to properly categorise,
> relatively quickly.
>
> The very oldest were recorded as 16bit 44.1k, more recent ones were 16bit, 48k
> and the latest ones 24bit 48k.
>
> I've moved them all into the same directory, so is there a simple script I can
> run that will scan this and list the name and details of each file?
>
> I can find plenty of programs that can change the format, but can't find any
> that will just tell me what it is :(
Hey hey,
This script will do the main work, you can replace the sndfile-info lines with exiftool lines, remember to change the grep expression.
***
#!/bin/bash
PID=$$
for F in *; do
sndfile-info "$F" &>audio-format-${PID}.log
SR=`cat audio-format-${PID}.log | grep -e "^Sample Rate" | awk '{ split($0,myarr,":"); print myarr[2] }'`
CHNLS=`cat audio-format-${PID}.log | grep -e "^Channels" | awk '{ split($0,myarr,":"); print myarr[2] }'`
BITS=`cat audio-format-${PID}.log | grep -e "Bit Width" | awk '{ split($0,myarr,":"); print myarr[2] }'`
echo "file: $F, samplerate: $SR, bit width: $BITS, channels $CHNLS"
# Insert conversion code here...
# Remember to put a semicolon after the last command in here!
done
rm audio-format-${PID}.log
***
I do like the exiftool output even better, since it tells you the format clearly, in case an extension is wrong and you'd need a different conversion tool for some outlandish format.
Good luck!
...
Ta-ta
---- Ffanci * Homepage: https://freeshell.de/~silvain * Twitter: http://twitter.com/ffanci_silvain * GitHub: https://github.com/fsilvain _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@email-addr-hidden http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-userReceived on Sun Sep 20 00:15:03 2015
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