Loading and saving Audio Files

Loading Audio Files

If VoceVista is already running, click on File  Open to open an existing file. You can also drag files into the VoceVista window. In Windows Explorer, you can right-click on a file and select "Open with" and then chose VoceVista. You may have to click on "Choose program…​" if VoceVista is not already listed.

Saving Audio Files

Click on File  Save to save a recording. On the File Save Dialog, you can select the file type on the bottom.

There are several keyboard shortcuts for saving files in a specific format.

Supported File Types

VoceVista can open most audio file formats. It can also open some video formats and load their audio stream.

For saving, VoceVista supports .wav, .ogg, .mp3, and .flac. Wav files are uncompressed. Those files require the most hard drive space, but they are also the fasted to open and save.

Lossless and lossy compression

The other three formats are compressed, so they all produce smaller files than .wav. For compressed formats, one distinguishes between lossy and lossless compression. Flac is a lossless format, which means that when a recording is saved as a .flac file and then loaded again, the reloaded data will be exactly what it was before. This perfect quality comes at a price, however, because the compression is usually not more than 50% compared to an uncompressed wav file.

Saving as Mp3 or Ogg

The formats .mp3 and .ogg use lossy compression. When a recording is saved in these formats and then loaded again, the restored data will be different from the original and depending on the strength of the compression, more or less detail will be lost. However, this enables much higher amounts of compression than the lossless formats. Files saved as .mp3 or .ogg are often 90% smaller than a .wav file with the same data. You can specify the amount of compression if you have selected one of those file types and press the Options button on the Save File Dialog.

Mp3 is the most popular format for compressed audio files. Ogg is a newer format that has been designed to replace mp3. It claims to have a better sound quality for files of the same size.

While you are editing a sound file, it is recommended to save it in the .wav format to avoid losing quality from compressing and uncompressing the file many times while it is opened and saved again. When the file is ready for archival, save it in .flac if you need perfect quality, or save it in .ogg if you want smaller files and can accept a certain loss in quality.