On Sun, 20 Sep 2015 14:03:41 +0200
Lorenzo Sutton <lorenzofsutton(a)gmail.com> wrote:
On 19/09/15 23:12, Will J Godfrey wrote:
Once again, thanks everyone
As it was only uncompressed files I was looking at 'file' turned out to be the
simplest and fastest. I simply redirected the output to create a text file, then
picked it up with kwrite.
I think soxi (part of sox) should also have been mentioned... then you
could quickly hack something like this:
for f in *.wav
do
SR=$(soxi -r "$f")
BITS=$(soxi -b "$f")
printf "%-20s %s bits, %s Hz\n" "$f" "$BITS"
"$SR"
done
Sample output:
agogo_h.wav 16 bits, 44100 Hz
agogo_lo.wav 16 bits, 44100 Hz
bell_tree.wav 16 bits, 44100 Hz
...
While I very much appreciate these suggestion. It was a one-off situation which
required (shamefully) little knowledge to complete. Were I to do something like
this on a regular basis then I would indeed dive into these more refined
solutions.
--
Will J Godfrey
http://www.musically.me.uk
Say you have a poem and I have a tune.
Exchange them and we can both have a poem, a tune, and a song.