Luis wrote: the advantage of making a cwb file is that it will only grab the audio that
is still being used by the project, without all edits and takes that are not used anymore, and still you can compress it to a rar file.Phil replied: well, if you deal with audio methodically e.g, do all edits on all of your tracks then, select all of the various audio tracks and use the "apply trimming" command then, select all of your various audio tracks again and use the "bounce to clips" command, and finally, use the "clean audio folder" option in the project folder that your working in then, you won't have any audio around that you don't need any more anyway. Note: I didn't suggest turning a .cwb file into a .rar file, as that will always work out bigger than raring up your project folder with the audio. Of course, if you don't want to work out which audio you need to keep then, you could save out the file as a .cwb then, unpack it and save the project. Then turn that folder and it's project into a .rar file and you would end up with a smaller file. The advantage of the approach that I have suggested is that you will only end up with 1 wave file per track. Where as, if you have done many edits on a track, and haven't used the "apply trimming" and "bounce to clips" commands then, you could have many wave files associated with that audio track.
Regards, Phil Muir P J Muir Productions, Music And Audio Production Telephone: US (615) 713-2021 UK+44-1747-821-794 Mobile: UK +44-7968-136-246 E-mail: info@xxxxxxxxxxxx URL:www.philmuir.com/
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