Edit Menu: Labeled Audio

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Revision as of 09:19, 3 July 2017 by PeterSampson (talk | contribs) (Paste Text to New Label {{shortcut|Ctrl + Alt + V}}: not in this submenu, so removed)
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Menú Editar: Audio etiquetado

Peter 01Jul17: ToDo-1 Image, imagemap and text need updating.
  • The Edit>Labels submenu has been split into two submenus: Edit>Labels and Edit>Labelled Audio.
    • This page needs updating (trimming out the label commands).
Items in the Labeled Audio  cascading Edit menu offer a time saving way of performing Edit Menu operations on the audio of multiple fully selected range labels.
Advice Note carefully that it is only the audio which is operated on, the labels themselves and the Label Track are not affected by most of the commands in this menu.
For example, if you have used Analyze > Sound Finder... to label all very loud sounds in a piece of audio (such as unwanted beeps or advertisements in a radio broadcast) you can use a Labeled Audio command to remove all those sounds in one go.</p>
The Edit Menu provides standard edit commands (Undo, Redo, Cut, Copy, Paste and Delete) plus many other commands specific to editing audio or labelsSelect Menu has commands that enable you make selections of tracks or parts of the tracks in your projectView Menu has commands that determine the amount of detail you see in all the tracks in the project window. It also lets you show or hide Toolbars and some additional windows such as Undo HistoryTransport Menu commands let you play or stop, loop play, scrub play or record (including timed and sound activated recordings)Tracks Menu provides commands for creating and removing tracks, applying operations to selected tracks such as mixing, resampling or converting from stereo to mono, and lets you add or edit labelsGenerate Menu lets you create audio containing tones, noise or silenceAudacity includes many built-in effects and also lets you use a wide range of plug-in effectsThe Analyze Menu contains tools for finding out about the characteristics of your audio, or labeling key featureThe Tools Menu contains customisable toolsThe Extra menu provides access to additional Commands that are not available in the normal default Audacity menusThe Help Menu lets you find out more about the Audacity application and how to use it.  It also includes some diagnostic tools.Undoes the most recent editing actionRedoes the most recently undone editing actionRemoves the selected audio data and/or labels and places these on the Audacity clipboardRemoves the selected audio data and/or labels without copying these to the Audacity clipboardCopies the selected audio data to the Audacity clipboard without removing it from the projectInserts whatever is on the Audacity clipboard at the position of the selection cursor in the project, replacing whatever audio data is currently selected, if anyCreates a new track containing only the current selection as a new clipFor more "advanced" removal of audioCreate or remove separate clips in the audio trackThese commands are to add and edit labelsLabeled Audio commands apply standard Edit Menu commands to the audio of one or more regions that are labeledThe Metadata Editor modifies information about a track, such as the artist and genrePreferences let you change most of the default behaviors and settings of AudacityBrings up a dialog box showing all of your labels in a keyboard-accessible tabular viewCreates a new, empty label at the cursor or at the selection regionCreates a new, empty label at the current playback or recording positionPastes the text on the Audacity clipboard at the cursor position in the currently selected label trackWhen a label track has the yellow focus border, if this option is on, just type to create a labelThe MenusEdit-LabelsMenu.png
Click for details
Click on the image to learn more


 



Mac users: Ctrl = and Alt = Option. So, for example, Ctrl + Alt + V = ⌘ + Option + V

Edit Labeled Submenu

The commands apply to all labeled audio regions that are fully inside a selection drawn in a label track. The selection may extend beyond the label boundaries, but audio that is not labeled and audio whose region label is only partly within the selection will not be acted on.

  • Region labels that touch each other without overlapping are treated as separate labeled regions.
  • If two or more region labels overlap, they are treated as one labeled region.
  • Labeled Audio Split can mark audio splits at point labels as well as at region labels.

To enable the Labeled Audio commands in the Edit menu, the selection must be made in the Label Track and must fully include (or extend beyond) at least one region label, or must touch (or extend beyond) at least one point label.

If none of the audio tracks are included in the selection, the Labeled Audio commands apply to all audio tracks in the project. However if you include only certain audio tracks in the selection, the Labeled Audio commands will only affect those selected audio tracks. See the examples below for a demonstration of the difference between selecting in the label track only versus selecting in the label track and one or more audio tracks.

When Sync-Lock Tracks is on, the menu commands Edit > Labels > Cut and Edit Labels > Delete are disabled.



Cut Alt + X

Removes the selected labeled audio data and puts it on the Audacity clipboard. Any audio data to the right of the selected labeled audio regions is shifted to the left. Only one item can be on the clipboard at a time, but it may include multiple audio tracks and multiple audio clips.

LabeledBeforeCut.png
LabeledAfterCutOrDelete.png
Note that the audio associated with "Label 2" and Label 3" has been cut, but the audio associated with "Label 1" and "Label 4" remains because Labels 1 and 4 were not fully inside the selection.

Delete Alt + K

Removes the selected labeled audio data but does not put it on the Audacity clipboard. Any audio data to the right of the selected labeled audio regions is shifted to the left.

Split Cut Shift + Alt + X

Same as Cut, but none of the audio data to right of the selected labeled audio regions is shifted. Gaps are thus left behind in the audio track which split the existing audio clip into multiple clips that can be moved independently using Time Shift Tool.

LabeledAfterSplitCut.png

Split Delete Shift + Alt + K

Same as Split Cut, but the audio is not copied to the Audacity clipboard.

Silence Audio Alt + L

The selected labeled audio regions are replaced with silence.

LabeledAfterSilenceAudio.png

Copy Shift + Alt + C

The selected labeled audio is copied to the Audacity clipboard.

The image below shows the result of selecting as in "Silence Audio" above so that Labels 2 and 3 were fully inside the selection, choosing Labeled Audio Copy, then creating a new audio track, pressing the Skip to Start button and pasting. The two audio clips associated with Labels 2 and 3 were pasted starting from the start of the new track, separated by blank space.

LabeledAfterPaste.png
Gale 10Jun13: The image above was a little confusing because naive user may think the selection used for the copy was the one that appeared after paste. I've adjusted the text but you may want to consider a new "before" image. I think it's acceptable now.

Split Alt + I

Peter 29Jun17: ToDo-1 The screenshots that show split lines between clips need to be redone, now that the styling of split lines has changed.

The audio track is split into multiple clips; a split is created at the boundaries of every fully-selected label.

LabeledBeforeSplit.png
LabeledAfterSplit.png
Note that "Label 2" and "Label 3" are touching but not overlapping, so they are still treated as separate labels and the boundary between them is marked with a split line.

Join Alt + J

Peter 29Jun17: ToDo-1 The screenshots that show split lines between clips need to be redone, now that the styling of split lines has changed.

Clips within the selected labeled audio regions are joined into one clip by removing the split lines.

LabeledBeforeJoin.png
LabeledAfterJoin.png

Detach At Silences Shift + Alt + J

In a labeled audio region that includes absolute silence and other audio, creates individual non-silent clips between the regions of silence. The silence in the region becomes blank space between the clips.

LabeledBeforeDetach.png
LabeledAfterDetach.png

If the labeled audio region is entirely silence, it becomes blank space between the audio either side of the region.


Type to Create a Label (on/off)

When the label track has the yellow focus border as in the image above you can, if preferred, just type to create a label containing that text rather than first using the menu or shortcut to create the label. This default behaviour can be turned off, if required, in Tracks Preferences by unchecking the "Type to create label".

  • When enabled (default), if there is already a label track that has the yellow focus border, you do not need to use "Add Label at Selection" or its Ctrl + B shortcut to create a new label. Just type your required label text to create a new label at the position of the editing cursor or selection region. If the label track does not have focus, use the Up or Down arrow keys on your keyboard to move focus into the label track.
  • When this preference is disabled, typing never creates a label in the focused label track. This lets you use shortcuts (for example, transport shortcuts to play audio related to the editing cursor or selection) without accidentally creating an unwanted label. When you want to create a new label, use "Add Label at Selection" or Ctrl + B or "Add Label at Playback Position" Ctrl + M.
Even if "Type to Create a Label" is enabled, you cannot type to create a new label:
  • if audio is playing, recording or paused, and the cursor or selection is at the same position in waveform and label track
  • if there is already a label at the exact same position in the label track.
You can still use Ctrl + B to add a new label even if it's at the same position, or Ctrl + M to add a label at the playback, recording or paused position.

You can also create a label at the same position by moving focus to and typing in another label track, as long as there is no label yet at that position, and if audio is playing, as long as the cursor or selection in the waveform is at a different position.


Examples

Example 1 - selection in the Label Track only

Example01 Before.png
The selection shown above was created by clicking and dragging in the label track. Applying the Edit > Labels > Split Cut command results in this:
Example01 After.png
Result: Audio has been cut only in the regions where the labels are fully inside the selection. Part of the first label is outside the selection so its audio is not affected by the Split Cut operation. The final two labels overlap each other, so are treated as one label.

Example 2 - selection in the Label Track and some Audio Tracks

If instead the selection is made in the bottom two audio tracks and the label track, applying the Edit > Labels > Split Cut command results in this:
Example02 After.png
Result: Audio has been cut only in the selected tracks and in the regions where the labels are fully inside the selection.

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