Split MP3 without re-encoding?

  • Thread starter Thread starter sync
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sync

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I'm looking for a program that displays the audio waveform (zoomable) for an MP3 and can save a section without re-encoding. I've found MP3 splitters but they don't display the waveform and are awkward to use. Cool Edit gives me the editing features I need but I have to re-encode if a I want to save a section.
 
I believe that anytime an mp3 is played back it is converted to a .wav on the fly. Its just a form of compression like .zip. You cant open a .zip file, first you need to convert it. So you can't edit an .mp3, you have to edit the uncompressed .wav and then recompress
 
There are tools that use a simple slider to pick cut points and then split without re-encoding. So it is possible. I just want more finesse in selecting the cut points.
 
sync said:
There are tools that use a simple slider to pick cut points and then split without re-encoding. So it is possible. I just want more finesse in selecting the cut points.
Sound Forge will give you "finesse" down to the sample level, but it's still a re-encode when you want to save one of the fragments. Why should that seem unreasonable? You *are* creating a new file.
 
Sound Forge's re-encoding requirement is not unreasonable since it deals with a variety of audio formats. I'm looking for an MP3 editor that has some of the sophistication of Sound Forge.
 
I think the problem is that the MP3 encoding process transforms the audio from the time domain (wav) to the frequency domain.

If I remember and understand the technical muckity-muck behind it, it basically means you can't edit with sample level accuracy without decoding and transforming back to the time domain. Which creates a catch-22, in that you'd have to re-encode again afterwards.

There's a few guys around here (like skippy) who really understand this stuff, I'm just a dabbler.
 
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