Is it possible to convert a file from .mp3 to .wav in R in order to be able to play the song with R?
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R is not a media player. You can use R for spectrum analysis with various packages, such as tuneR which seewave uses.– M O'ConnellNov 10, 2016 at 0:49
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1@MO'Connell Some speech recognition softwares, such as CMU Sphinx, only take .wav files as input. This is the situation I am in right now. So the question is not only for misusing R as a media player (which I wouldn't have a problem with either).– mattuAug 26, 2017 at 18:38
1 Answer
Yes (probably). Here's an example:
Converting MP3 to WAV is pretty straightforward:
library(tuneR)
r <- readMP3("04 Trip to Paris.mp3") ## MP3 file in working directory
writeWave(r,"tmp.wav",extensible=FALSE)
(to install tuneR
on Linux, see here).
Playback is harder and platform-dependent. tuneR::play()
tries to use an external player.
- On Windows it tries to guess:
If under Windows and no player is given, “mplay32.exe” or “wmplayer.exe” (if the former does not exists as under Windows 7) will be chosen as the default.
- On MacOS, specifying
"open"
probably works. - On Linux, specifying
"play"
probably works if you have thesox
package installed (sudo apt-get install sox
).
So on my MacOS system
tuneR::play("tmp.wav","open")
works.
An alternative that does not use external resources is audio::play()
.
library(audio)
w <- load.wave("tmp.wav")
play(load.wave("tmp.wav"))
It works on MacOS. I don't know if it works on Windows. It does not work on my Linux system; audio
doesn't even install unless you sudo apt-get install portaudio19-dev
first, and works poorly even once installed.
(When I say "Linux" here I mean the only system I've tested, Ubuntu 14.04. The sudo apt-get install ...
incantations I've listed are likely to work on other reasonably recent Debian-based systems, but ... ???)
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not that I can tell from the docs.
library(sos); findFn("write mp3")
doesn't work either. Maybe post a new question giving more detail about what you want to do? Jul 9, 2017 at 1:00