![]() I think the solution is going to be one of the following: But I haven't been able to figure out anything that works. I read through The Absolute Minimum Every Softward Developer Absolutely, Positively Must Know About Unicode and Character Sets and Pragmatic Unicode and I know, in general, I want to decode the input, run the rest of the code (not printed above, but I use the file name to extract information from a database, then format that information and want to put the resulting string into the metadata), and then encode it again. I'm using Spyder 2.3.1 and I have # - coding: utf-8 - at the top of my script. Since it shows the "en dash" as x\96, it must be using cp1252. I'm pretty sure this is an encoding problem of some kind. The files with the "en dash" shows that it was modified when I run this, but when I check the metadata in Adobe Acrobat, there's nothing there. This works fine for files without the "en dash". Currently I have: from pdfrw import PdfReader,PdfWriterĪdd_keywords(f,'some exciting metadata!') My problem is dealing with PDFs with names that have certain characters in them - in the example I tried, the name had an "en dash" in it, but I'm sure in the future (I don't control these file names) there will be other similar issues. WAV files are in 16-bit/44.1K, 2 channel (stereo) file format.I'm writing a script that will add PDF metadata to a list of PDFs. Whether mailing or uploading, just be sure your. If burning and mailing a disc, they also explain how to be sure to keep them in. You can check the Discmaker FAQs for details - file format questions are towards the top. They do a great job, have quick turn-arounds, and ultimately, this can save you some $ on the DDP/RedBook software. Depending on your internet connection, it takes time to upload the WAV files, (then re-download and audition, to be sure there were no transfer glitches), but it's slick, quality, and you can enter all your track info in an online form. ![]() Or, you can even upload individual songs in these formats to their server, which I did for my last project, and it worked well. If you're pressing CDs in the U.S., you can use Discmakers, and mail them a CD in AIFF, or WAV format (recommended). Wish I read your comments earlier, Lagerfeldt. I tried using it in Jan.with much frustration. Import into Sonoris DDP Creator or similar and make a DDP image or Red Book CD. If you want to do it yourself, finalize the audio in Logic Pro and export to 16 bit dithered WAV or AIFF. Or you can hand in the files to a mastering engineer who can take care of the process for you. You need to hand in a DDP image or a Red Book CD (probably the latter if it's a small shop). Scandalous software.įor duplication you can't simply hand in raw files. Lack of data integrity, bugged CD-Text, illegal PQ codes, end-of-file or end-of-disc clicks, the list goes on. I don't recommend you use it for anything as it will change your sound and likely cause errors/rejection at the plant. WaveBurner is an old and defective piece of software. But as mentioned, the audio on the disc isn't AIFF or WAV. When you rip audio from a CD on a Mac, the OS will rip it into the AIFF format. The audio is in the PCM format, just like WAV or AIFF, though always 16 bit. WaveBurner doesn't burn audio as AIFF or WAV.
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