The "/s" preserves the folder structure when copying the files. Suppose you want to edit the file, go to enhance the volume, trim the duration according to your preference. Convert M4A to MP3 You can start converting as soon as you have selected the file. Then set the format into MP3 format at the top right of the window. xcopy /s *.mp3 C:\Music C:\output, for example, and then the same again with *.m4a instead of *.mp3. First, click on the sign to select the M4A file you want to convert to MP3. Then Encode -> Start Encodingįor the MP3s and M4As, I used the xcopy command in Powershell. In fre:ac -> add -> add audio files -> by pattern, then go to music folder and use pattern ".flac" to only add the FLAC files to the conversion queue. Output format for me is Opus with 128 kbps. In fre:ac -> General Settings -> Encoder, I set the output filename to \ which preserves the folder structure and filenames. In the end I used a combination of fre:ac and xcopy. It also still leaves the question how to copy the MP3s/M4As with their respective folder structures to the new folder?Įdit: Thank you for all suggestions. I haven't used this program before so not sure if it will work. What's the best way (program) to do this? I was considering using fre:ac to convert from FLAC to Opus by using the "add files by pattern" function (with pattern = *.flac). The folder structure should also stay intact. ZAMZAR is a free online tool that can help you convert m4a to mp3 format, it has converted over 510 million files. Basically, whenever there is a FLAC it should be converted to Opus, but the MP3s and AAC M4As should of course not be re-encoded to Opus but just copied. I'd like to create a COPY of this library for use on my phone. The folder structure is %artist%/%album%/%title%. So, basically I have my music folder now, which contains 80% FLACs, 10% MP3s, and 10% AAC M4As.
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