![]() Oh, and then I zoom in and repeat, until I get down to samples. Then I find the same peak on the other wav and move it to the same point. I use Audacity, so I then put that peak on some visible repeatable boundary that has a tick mark on the top time ruler. To align the tracks, I always choose a good visible peak. You won't hear it, but there's no way you can mathematically compare them and get that answer) Hope this helps. It won't tell you why the samples are different (for example, one wav could be 1/10 dB louder than the other. ![]() ![]() EAC (exact audio copy) will compare wavs and give you an interesting report. ![]() It'll only work well if your wav files are sample for sample aligned. That sounds like inverting one of the files (changing it's phase 180 degrees) and then adding the two waveforms together (mixing). This step-by-step article demonstrates how to compare two files to see if their contents. Describes how to create a File-Compare function in Visual C#.
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