radsdau
radsdau

Reputation: 501

Convert AAC to WAV

I'm already using the Media Foundation APIs (thanks to MFManagedEncode, http://blogs.msdn.com/b/mf/archive/2010/02/18/mfmanagedencode.aspx) to convert wav to aac. I haven't fully got my head around how this works, but it does work- thankfully.

Now I'm finding it difficult transcoding the other way, even though there is a MF codec for it (AAC Decoder). I can't find examples of how to use this and I'm finding the MSDN documentation for it cryptic to say the least; anyone had an luck with it?

A C# wrapper for would be ideal.

TIA.

Upvotes: 4

Views: 6278

Answers (2)

Jimm98y
Jimm98y

Reputation: 181

I wanted to decode AAC to PCM/WAV without depending upon MediaFoundation in order to make the code easily portable to other platforms. So I ported the JAAD from Java to netstandard 2.0. It has no native dependencies and I've also included a sample how to use it to convert from AAC to WAV. You can find it here. It's also available as a nuget.

Upvotes: 0

YourSelf
YourSelf

Reputation: 304

I have been succesfuly using NAudio for any audio processing and abstraction. It is available as a NuGet. It has wrapper encoders for Media Foundation (and others).

Here is a sample for encoding to AAC and back to WAV using NAudio:

using System;
using NAudio.Wave;

namespace ConsoleApplication11
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            // convert source audio to AAC
            // create media foundation reader to read the source (can be any supported format, mp3, wav, ...)
            using (MediaFoundationReader reader = new MediaFoundationReader(@"d:\source.mp3"))
            {
                MediaFoundationEncoder.EncodeToAac(reader, @"D:\test.mp4");
            }

            // convert "back" to WAV
            // create media foundation reader to read the AAC encoded file
            using (MediaFoundationReader reader = new MediaFoundationReader(@"D:\test.mp4"))
            // resample the file to PCM with same sample rate, channels and bits per sample
            using (ResamplerDmoStream resampledReader = new ResamplerDmoStream(reader, 
                new WaveFormat(reader.WaveFormat.SampleRate, reader.WaveFormat.BitsPerSample, reader.WaveFormat.Channels)))
            // create WAVe file
            using (WaveFileWriter waveWriter = new WaveFileWriter(@"d:\test.wav", resampledReader.WaveFormat))
            {
                // copy samples
                resampledReader.CopyTo(waveWriter);
            }
        }
    }
}

Upvotes: 6

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