Data Preferences - Adobe AUDITION 3 User Manual

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Displays boundary lines in the waveform display. Boundary lines are the horizontal lines that
Show Boundary Lines
visually indicate where the waveform's amplitude approaches or exceeds the clipping level. The value in the Display
Lines At option specifies the amplitude at which the boundary lines appear.
Specifies options for peak (.pk) files, in which Adobe Audition stores information about how to display
Peak Files
WAV files. Peak files make file opening almost instantaneous by greatly reducing the time it takes to draw the
waveform (especially with larger files).
Determines the number of samples per block to use when storing peak files. Larger values reduce
Peaks Cache
the RAM requirement for large files at the expense of slightly slower drawing at some zoom levels. If RAM is an issue
on your system, and you're working with very large files (several hundred megabytes or more in size), consider
increasing the Peaks Cache to 1024 or even 1536 or 2048.
Saves peak (.pk) files in the same folder as all WAV files. You can safely delete peak files or
Save Peak Cache Files
deselect this option; however, without peak cache files, larger audio files reopen more slowly.
Rebuild Wave Display Now
Show On-Clip Gain Control When There Is No Selection Range
the amplitude of an entire file without first making a selection.

Data preferences

In the Preferences dialog box, click the Data tab to control how Adobe Audition handles audio data:
Auto-Convert All Data To 32-Bit Upon Opening
subsequent operations occur in the 32-bit realm.
Interpret 32-Bit PCM .wav Files As 16.8 Float
versions when handling 32-bit PCM WAV files.
Dither Transform Results
does most processing using arithmetic greater than 16-bit, with the results converted back to 16-bit when complete.
During this conversion, dithering provides a higher dynamic range and cleaner results, with fewer distortions and
negative artifacts.
With this option enabled, you can approximate 24-bit performance with 16-bit data, because dithering increases
dynamic range by about 10 dB. If this option is disabled, audio data is truncated to 16-bit during reconversion, and
more subtle information is lost.
The drawback of dithering is that each operation adds a small amount of noise at the quietest volume levels.
However, the trade-off between dithering (adding noise) and truncating the data (creating artifacts and limiting
dynamic range) generally favors dithering, so it's best to select this option.
Use Symmetric Dithering
selected, a DC offset of one-half sample is added each time data is dithered. Symmetric dithering has just as many
samples added above zero as below zero. By contrast, nonsymmetric dithering just toggles between 0 and 1.
Sometimes in a final dither, this may be desired to reduce the bit range of the dither. However, both methods produce
identical audible results in every respect.
Smooth Delete And Cut Boundaries Over
clicks at these locations. Applies only the boundaries over the number of milliseconds specified in the edit box.
Smooth All Edit Boundaries By Crossfading
of the selection. This option smooths any abrupt transitions at these end points, thus preventing audible clicks when
Rescans the current file for sample amplitudes and redraws the waveform.
Converts all 8-bit and 16-bit data to 32-bit when a file is opened. All
Makes this version of Adobe Audition compatible with previous
Enables dithering when processing effects such as FFT Filter or Amplify. Adobe Audition
Enables symmetric dithering. In most cases, it's best to select this option. If it is not
Smooths cut and delete operations at the splicing point, preventing audible
Automatically applies a crossfade to the starting and ending boundaries
Always shows the on-clip control, so you can adjust
ADOBE AUDITION 3.0
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