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Save christofluethi/646ae60d797a46a706a5 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
brew update | |
brew link yasm | |
brew link x264 | |
brew link lame | |
brew link xvid | |
brew install ffmpeg | |
ffmpeg wiki: | |
https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/Encode/MP3 | |
lame option Average kbit/s Bitrate range kbit/s ffmpeg option | |
-b 320 320 320 CBR (non VBR) example -b:a 320k (NB this is 32KB/s, or its max) | |
-V 0 245 220-260 -q:a 0 (NB this is VBR from 22 to 26 KB/s) | |
-V 1 225 190-250 -q:a 1 | |
-V 2 190 170-210 -q:a 2 | |
-V 3 175 150-195 -q:a 3 | |
-V 4 165 140-185 -q:a 4 | |
-V 5 130 120-150 -q:a 5 | |
-V 6 115 100-130 -q:a 6 | |
-V 7 100 80-120 -q:a 7 | |
-V 8 85 70-105 -q:a 8 | |
-V 9 65 45-85 -q:a 9 | |
ffmpeg -i in.m4a -codec:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 1 out.mp3 |
Thank you for this. I created a macOS "Quick Action" out of this in Applescript/Automator (with "audio file in Finder" as input)
on run {input, parameters}
tell application "Finder"
set fileAlias to input as alias
set fileName to name of fileAlias
set fileExtension to name extension of fileAlias
set AppleScript's text item delimiters to "."
set title to text 1 thru text item -2 of fileName
set theInputFilePath to POSIX path of fileAlias
set theOutputFilePath to text item 1 of theInputFilePath
set convert to do shell script "/usr/local/bin/ffmpeg '" & theOutputFilePath & ".mp3" & "' -i '" & theInputFilePath & "' -codec:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 1"
set theOutput to theOutputFilePath & ".mp3"
end tell
return theOutput
end run
Great to see this — a real help! One tweak that further refined this for me was needed, since I was getting an error, Trailing options were found on the commandline
. My "quality" setting was being ignored as a consequence.
I followed the guidlelines about ordering elements on the ffmpeg
syntax structure from this StackOverflow Q&A, and all was good. It only took putting the output file after its options, so tweaking the example given by OP:
ffmpeg -i in.m4a -codec:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 1 out.mp3
Great to see this — a real help! One tweak that further refined this for me was needed, since I was getting an error,
Trailing options were found on the commandline
. My "quality" setting was being ignored as a consequence.I followed the guidlelines about ordering elements on the
ffmep
syntax structure from this StackOverflow Q&A, and all was good. It only took putting the output file after its options, so tweaking the example given by OP:ffmpeg -i in.m4a -codec:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 1 out.mp3
thanks for heads up. changed it.
Thank you for this. I created a macOS "Quick Action" out of this in Applescript/Automator (with "audio file in Finder" as input)
on run {input, parameters} tell application "Finder" set fileAlias to input as alias set fileName to name of fileAlias set fileExtension to name extension of fileAlias set AppleScript's text item delimiters to "." set title to text 1 thru text item -2 of fileName set theInputFilePath to POSIX path of fileAlias set theOutputFilePath to text item 1 of theInputFilePath set convert to do shell script "/usr/local/bin/ffmpeg '" & theOutputFilePath & ".mp3" & "' -i '" & theInputFilePath & "' -codec:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 1" set theOutput to theOutputFilePath & ".mp3" end tell return theOutput end run
on run {input, parameters}
tell application "Finder"
repeat with fileitem in input
set fileAlias to fileitem as alias
set fileName to name of fileAlias
set fileExtension to name extension of fileAlias
set AppleScript's text item delimiters to "."
set title to text 1 thru text item -2 of fileName
set theInputFilePath to POSIX path of fileAlias
set theOutputFilePath to text item 1 of theInputFilePath
set convert to do shell script "/usr/local/bin/ffmpeg '" & theOutputFilePath & ".mp3" & "' -i '" & theInputFilePath & "' -codec:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 1"
set theOutput to theOutputFilePath & ".mp3"
end repeat
end tell
return theOutput
end run
thanks , I change the code with "Get Selected Files in Finder" as input to support multi files (on my laptop , MacOS Monterey version 12.5 )
however, I not know how to work with "audio file in Finder" as input, thanks so much if have your reply @atchoo78
Thank you for this. I created a macOS "Quick Action" out of this in Applescript/Automator (with "audio file in Finder" as input)
on run {input, parameters} tell application "Finder" set fileAlias to input as alias set fileName to name of fileAlias set fileExtension to name extension of fileAlias set AppleScript's text item delimiters to "." set title to text 1 thru text item -2 of fileName set theInputFilePath to POSIX path of fileAlias set theOutputFilePath to text item 1 of theInputFilePath set convert to do shell script "/usr/local/bin/ffmpeg '" & theOutputFilePath & ".mp3" & "' -i '" & theInputFilePath & "' -codec:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 1" set theOutput to theOutputFilePath & ".mp3" end tell return theOutput end runon run {input, parameters} tell application "Finder" repeat with fileitem in input set fileAlias to fileitem as alias set fileName to name of fileAlias set fileExtension to name extension of fileAlias set AppleScript's text item delimiters to "." set title to text 1 thru text item -2 of fileName set theInputFilePath to POSIX path of fileAlias set theOutputFilePath to text item 1 of theInputFilePath set convert to do shell script "/usr/local/bin/ffmpeg '" & theOutputFilePath & ".mp3" & "' -i '" & theInputFilePath & "' -codec:a libmp3lame -qscale:a 1" set theOutput to theOutputFilePath & ".mp3" end repeat end tell return theOutput end runthanks , I change the code with "Get Selected Files in Finder" as input to support multi files (on my laptop , MacOS Monterey version 12.5 )
however, I not know how to work with "audio file in Finder" as input, thanks so much if have your reply @atchoo78
Hi! Thanks for the modified code. Sorry I wasn't clear on this. What I meant by that is this:
I created a new document in Automator, chose the "Quick Action" document type and the "AppleScript" action with the actual script. I configured the "Quick Action" like this in Automator:
That's what I meant by
"...with "audio file in Finder" as input"
Andreas 🙂
I wonder why the size increases so much?
I had an m4a of size: '124943', and the output of the command given above produced an mp3 of size: '518403'
Seems odd.
thanks for pointing out. fixed.