Your lesson for today is to look up crossfades in the manual.
Another tip would be to chop off a tiny piece of audio from the back of the first bit of audio and the front of the next bit of audio. Zoom in down to the sample level and make sure that your edit is at the 0 line. (the horizontal line in the middle)
This along with crossfading should reduce you cliks.
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This is a common problem. Your lesson for today is to look up c
This is a common problem.
Your lesson for today is to look up crossfades in the manual.
Another tip would be to chop off a tiny piece of audio from the back of the first bit of audio and the front of the next bit of audio. Zoom in down to the sample level and make sure that your edit is at the 0 line. (the horizontal line in the middle)
This along with crossfading should reduce you cliks.
I will try and look into this, thank you Anthony
I will try and look into this, thank you Anthony
We had the [[url=http://[/URL]="http://recording.org/threads/394
We had the [[url=http://[/URL]="http://recording.or…"]same question [/]="http://recording.or…"]same question [/] a little over a month ago:
This should help.
I used the cross-fades and it resolved my problems, thank you bo
I used the cross-fades and it resolved my problems, thank you both again!