How To Trim In Audacity

In this tutorial, we're going to take a look at a cool trick you can use in Audacity to trim your audio in the background. How can you do this? Well, there are two ways to do it. The first involves using the "Trash Can" function. This works by pressing the TAB button on your keyboard when you highlight an area of audio. Once you do that, a trash can will appear next to the selection you made.

trim in audacity

 

To use this, first thing you'll need to do is right click your chosen track. You then have a few options. You can either: select "Trim" from the main menu or double click "Trim inaudible". The difference is that when you do either of these, the track will be automatically trashed. This makes it much easier to control where your audio goes. If you mess up and use the delete button instead of the TAB key, you'll notice that nothing will get trashed.

 

Another way to activate this is to press the TAB key on your keyboard while holding down the shift key. This will create a selection area around whatever you are highlighting in the track. The problem with this is that if you change your selection area, you may need to restart your recording. So, as you probably can tell, we recommend using the built-in keyboard shortcuts for things like this. There's really nothing too difficult about it.

How to Trim In Audacity

 

There are some other neat tricks you can use to trim your audio and video files out of the Audacity program. First, you can use the "exporting tab" to do some simple exporting of your files to an AVI or WAV file. By default, this button is greyed out. Click it to turn it on so you can start saving your files to an acceptable format.

 

A very useful keyboard shortcut is the "round wave" shortcut which is on the right side as you look at the top menu. You can use this to quickly flip through parts of your audio or video in the order you want them produced. This works particularly well when you need to cut from one part of an audio track to another. If you only want certain parts of your audio exported, you can set the round wave shortcut to only export the first three seconds of each track. In the latter case, it's more useful to use the mouse for trimming. It is, after all, a little more time consuming to click to flip though the tracks than to simply point at them.

 

A quick trick to learning how to Trim In Audacity is by using the "click to edit" function. Simply select the "play" icon on the track and choose "edit". Then, click the little arrow near the top right corner of the track. This will bring up a box with a rectangular shape. Click in the shape and use the "cut" option.

 

If you're exporting an audio file from your computer and want to remove background noise, it is quite easy. Just find the "audio" icon which is shown near the top right corner of the main screen. Click this to open the noise reduction section of the menu. Here you will see a drop down menu with four options: Noise Reduction, Floorish, Distortion and Crossover Point. Select any of these options and click OK to apply.

 

There are several other ways to get the same results as described above for recording new audio. You can use Windows Media Player to record streaming audio. You can also use Windows Media Player to record offline files like voice files or telephone dialogs. If you want to do both on one computer, you can open Windows Media Player on another computer using the same software license as the one you just used to record the streaming audio. When you open this second software, it will open in the same window as Windows Media Player.

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