If the file doesn't have a Macintosh four-character file type, it appears
in the Open File dialog box if it has one of these extensions:
.aifc
.aiff
.au
.irc
.sf
.snd
.wav
.WAV
Once the file is open the Soundfile Information dialog box appear. This
dialog gives the name, sample rate, length in seconds, number of channels,
type, and numeric format of the sound file.
Figure 2: Soundfile Information box.
If you select a process from the Hack menu, SoundHack processes the file
displayed in the Soundfile Information box. Only one input sound file may
be open at a time.
Open Any command
Opens any file as a sound file. Useful for opening headerless and text
sound files. Text sound files should be formatted so that each line is a
fixed point sample. Here is an example of how the text should look:
Headerless files (both text and raw) must be saved to another format
before being processed.
Close command
Closes the currently open sound file.
Save A Copy command
Saves a copy of the open sound file in any sound file format. This command
makes it possible to convert sound files from a variety of formats to AIFF
files. Save a Copy offers two compressed 3DO file formats. To access them,
select first the File Type Audio IFC in the Format pop-up, then8 Bit 2:1
3DO SQXD or 4 Bit 4:1 ADPCM in the dialog below.
Note: This is the primary command to use if your main goal is file
conversion.
lisTen to AIFF file command
Plays the open AIFF or AIFC file through the Macintosh speaker. You need
SoundManager 3.0 or an AV machine for this to work properly.
Import SND resource command
Lets you convert an Apple sound resource to a sound file.
Export SND resource command
Lets you write part of a sound file into an Apple sound resource. The
length of the sound resource is limited by the amount of memory allocated
to SoundHack.