MacOSX flac tools:
https://xiph.org/flac/documentation_tasks.html#osx
Flac is a lossless compression codec. It will *losslessly* encode whatever it is fed. There is no such thing as 'a flac'. There is a file that has been passed through flac (it will have the *.flac) suffix. If the source of lossy then so will be the flac-encoded version.
It's the same with any codec. For example, the input file to an mp3 codec might be 'lossless' file, or it might be something that has already been passed through a lossy codec. The file suffix doesn't tell you. It only tells you whether *further* compression (lossy or lossless) was applied.
Are we clear now?
On 11/02/14 08:11, Gish Bart wrote:
If you want to play FLAC on Mac, you'd better to convert FLAC to MP3, AAC, AC3, M4A, AIFF, etc.
Here is a guide to help you do this job at: http://www.faasoft.com/articles/flac-to-mp3.html
This guide applies to:
1. Convert FLAC to MP3, WAV, AAC, AC3, DTS, AU, AIFF, and etc;
2. Convert other audio formats to FLAC;
3. Extract audio from video files.--
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