Ecasound will append also, an example exists on the official ecasound
examples page:
The relevant section says:
<SNIP>
"Cut, Copy and Paste
1. ecasound -i bigfile.wav -o part1.wav -t:60.0
2. ecasound -i bigfile.wav -y:60.0 -o part2.wav
Here's a simple example where first 60 seconds of bigfile.wav is
written to part1.wav and the rest to part2.wav. If you want to combine
these files back to one big file:
3. ecasound -i part2.wav -o part1.wav -y:500
part2.wav is appended to part1.wav."
</SNIP>
The "-y:" flag is the offset of the next "track" in seconds. A chain
of these should get you what you want.
K
On Sat, 23 Oct 2004 17:01:31 -0400, Jesse Chappell <jesse(a)essej.net> wrote:
Lee Revell wrote on Sat, 23-Oct-2004:
On Sat, 2004-10-23 at 22:16 +0200, derek holzer
wrote:
Lee Revell wrote:
Um, if this operation is cumbersome then your GUI
app is _horribly_
broken. This should be as easy as "File -> Open Append" and select all
the files. Even easier than catting them all together.
Maybe you can tell me which app isn't horribly broken, then.
I can't see this "open append" feature in either Rezound or Audacity.
Is there really no Linux app with this simple feature?
Try wavbreaker, which contains a utility called wavmerge, which
is a command-line app to merge wavs together. I'm not sure what
the large-file support is like for it, and be careful, because
a standard WAV is length-limited, you might need to use something like
W64 to represent big (>4G ?) sound files.
jlc