Reading lots of threads with people having problems with Cue files these days, (which looks like it was addressed in .041?).
I used to use Cue files all of the time when I first started ripping cds a long time ago now .... I didn't have much of a clue what I was doing and just read that EAC was the go-to ripper and it issued CUE files along with individual flac files. My limited understanding, as it really didn't interest me at that time to look into it really, was that it could "remember" actual Gaps between tracks and that it could also "index" tracks which were ripped to one big file for individual playback. Also, it was good to have them to re-burn cds so there wouldn't be an arbitrary gap made (which if I remember was 2 seconds).
After a couple of years, the idea of burning CDs became pretty absurd for me, I started using dbpoweramp as a ripper and players that supported gapless playback etc. And totally removed Cue files from my collection and workflow completely.
So I guess I don't understand why anyone would use cue files at all - why complicate life?
Now thinking this through I hear about ripping SACDs to iso -- so maybe that is a reason?
- Is that the only way to do this? Can ISOs not be split into individual tracks?
Even if you had a "mix tape" and wanted it to be totally trackless, not sure why you would want to combine the files into one file (professional or home studio creations excluded).
Then I read a thread of a member who has 400k tracks which is almost 4 times what I have in my music library. And that is a considerable investment in time and effort getting a library of that size organized ... if I understood correctly, all of his library is based around cue files.
- What benefits would cue file organization have for medium to large collections?
Also my understanding is with a cue file you can accurately split a large file into separate tracks. Individual tracks that I had with related cue files are stand-alone-viable to me -- I erased all of my cue files 5 years ago ... so
- it must have only something to do with combined tracks into larger files?
Other than mastering with pro tools or similar projects for home studio/pro studio use,
- why do people use CUE files anymore in an audio collection?
Thanks for any contributors to my education