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Topic: Recompressing existing FLAC files to 8 (without duplication) (Read 5981 times) previous topic - next topic
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Recompressing existing FLAC files to 8 (without duplication)

I have about 5,000 FLAC albums at various levels of compression. A lot are already at level 8, but many are not. Is there some nifty app. that will run through the non-8 compressed ones and recompress them to an 8 for me, checking its work?

I cannot see that dBpoweramp can do this.

Thanks for any insights.

 

Recompressing existing FLAC files to 8 (without duplication)

Reply #1
There is no way, that I know of, to convert a file without duplicating it. However, dBpoweramp does have a DSP that will delete the source file after conversion.

Addendum: I stand corrected.[strike][/strike]

Recompressing existing FLAC files to 8 (without duplication)

Reply #2
From the FLAC documentation page.

flac abc.flac --force

I'm sure a little experimentation with foobar2000 convert and the --force option would lead you to a workable solution.

Recompressing existing FLAC files to 8 (without duplication)

Reply #3
Is $info(codec_profile) populated by the compression level in the case of FLAC files?

Recompressing existing FLAC files to 8 (without duplication)

Reply #4
Nope. The compression level information isn't stored anywhere in FLAC's metadata blocks, and I don't believe it can be derived from anything.

Recompressing existing FLAC files to 8 (without duplication)

Reply #5
Correct, FLAC does not indicate its compression rate (unless it was written to the ID Tags).

Recompressing existing FLAC files to 8 (without duplication)

Reply #6
Not that it matters.  Recompress them all.  It's not like you'll need your slide rule and a ream of paper to do it.  It very well may take two weeks, but idle cycles are the devil's playthings!

Creature of habit.

Recompressing existing FLAC files to 8 (without duplication)

Reply #7
In old days, there were lots of warnings that the --force might eat your files (the right thing for a converter to do is to write, compare, and then delete -- I believe this is the feature of dBpoweramp mentioned by EagleScout1998). If using --force, I would (and did) copy, recompress, verify and then copy back.