Quick Guide

From Audacity Manual

Jump to: navigation, search

Audacity Project Window

Mixer Toolbar Tools Toolbar Control Toolbar Meter Toolbar Edit Toolbar

Annotated Audacity window, keyed from surrounding buttons

Timeline Selection Toolbar Track Panel

Audacity is an open-source multi-track audio editor/recorder. It can be used for something as simple as importing an audio file and decreasing the volume, to something as complicated as creating an extensive piece of music using many different tracks and overdubs. Skip to Getting Started.

Audacity supports many common audio formats including MP3, MP2, OGG Vorbis, FLAC and WAV/AIFF. WMA is not supported. Unencrypted QuickTime-based audio such as M4A and AAC can be imported (but not exported) on Mac computers only. MIDI files can be imported, but only for display.

Audacity projects contain a file (MyProject.aup) plus an associated data folder (MyProject_data) full of hundreds or thousands of audio files. To create audio files that you can use in another program or burn an audio CD, you will want to Export as WAV or AIFF, not Save an Audacity project.

An Audacity project is made up of multiple tracks. Each track may be mono or stereo (stereo tracks can be split into two mono tracks for individual editing) and has a sample rate, sample format, gain, and panning controls. Each track can contain more than one audio clip. Audio clips can be moved between tracks using the Time Shift Tool. Audacity always mixes all tracks together during playback or export; there's usually never a need to explicitly mix since it happens automatically.

Most types of editing (including using plug-in effects) require some or all of the audio in a project to be selected. The Audacity selection is simultaneously a set of selected tracks and a time range. Both can be modified independently by shift-clicking to modify the time range, or shift-clicking on a track label to toggle it. The selection can also be modified by the keyboard, using control, shift, and arrow keys, plus the enter key to toggle the selection of the focused track, or using the selection bar at the bottom of the screen.

Views
Help Location