1. Digital Audio | 2. Rules of Audacity | 3. Setup, Audio Import and Playback |
4. Recording with Audacity | 5. Common Editing Tasks |
If you'd like to get straight playing an imported file or recording something, you can skip this section and come back later. This section is especially intended for people who may have used other audio editors before, and want to understand how to do things differently when using Audacity.
Whenever you work with Audacity, there are some rules you should remember:
1. One clip per track |
If you want two pieces of audio to sound at the same time, put them in two different tracks.
2. Audacity always records to a new track |
3. Edit/Duplicate will not create a new audio file |
What Audacity does is reference the original audio material until you actualy perform some kind of edit on it, such as cutting a piece away, or using any effect on it. One thing to remember is the UNDO function. You can undo/redo stuff as many times as you like, and yes, even after you have saved your project.
You may ask what happens if you do, for example, cut away a piece or mark off a 30 minute piece and split it to a new track. It only writes changed data to disk. Since Audacity works with chunk of audio data of around one megabyte in size, this happens quite fast. Rest assured that the only big waiting period might be the importing of large audio files.