![]() I’m certain there’s a shorter way of saying that (if someone needs clarification later on, lmk). I actually had to just copy paste the correct file name in the cmd prompt and hit enter and have it launch from there…since for whatever reason that recovered file only shows up in the cmd dir, and not from your File>Open file folder for AudRecover. For a number of years Audacity has been available in two separate versions: an elderly, stable 1.3.6 release that doesn’t work on newer versions of OS X and Windows, and a long-running beta series that reached version 1.3.14 before it finally morphed into this, Audacity 2.0, more than six years after it first appeared. ![]() Next was that even though it eventually DID work and there was now a file in the cmd directory that was a recovered version (in my case, due to my mistake, now labeled “3”), I finally realized I couldn’t just go to File>Open in Audacity and open the file there. Although, I will say, the next snag I came to (incase someone else is reading this having the same issue) was that I had labeled the file “p3” myself, then of course the program labels the file with it’s own instance of “.aup3” - stupid mistake, I know, but caused me a lot of hastle.
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