Manage Macros allows you to edit, remove or rename existing Macros or add a new Macro. It also allows you to apply Macros to you project or a set of files.
Any built-in, LADSPA, LV2, Nyquist, VST or Audio Unit (Mac) effect shown in the Effect Menu can be added to a Macro. You can also add plugins in any format that are shown in the Generate or Analyze Menus (including Vamp analysis effects), the built-in Find Clipping analyzer and a number of export commands.
Macros may be applied to either the entirety of the current project or to a selection of files using the Tools > Macros... command.
It is possible to use Noise Reduction in Macros but see Noise Reduction Tips for how the Noise Profile is captured.
The full list of all Macro commands, with descriptions, is available at Scripting Reference.
You can access the Manage Macros dialog by using either:
The menu Tools > Manage Macros, or
The Expand button in the Macros Palette dialog.
Select Macro contains a list of already defined Macros. You can define the name of a new Macro and select which Macro is active.
The left hand box in the dialog (labeled Select Macro) contains a list of already defined Macros. Until you add a new Macro, it only has built-in MP3 Conversion and Fade Ends Macros.
Use left-click (or use the Up or Down keyboard arrows) to select the Macro you want to work on
New: Adds a new Macro to the list.
Remove: Remove the selected Macro from the list - grayed out when the Macros that ship as part of Audacity are selected.
Rename...: Rename the selected Macro - grayed out when the Macros that ship as part of Audacity are selected.
Restore: Resets any Audacity provided Macro to its default settings - grayed out when user-provided Macros are selected.
Import...: Enables you to import a Macro from a TXT file.
Export: Exports the selected Macro to a TXT file.
Edit Steps lists the sequence of commands in order of first to last (End) for the Macro selected in the Select Macro box to left.
The Macro can include a number of common Audacity functions and effects to be executed in any order you specify.
To create an audio file as part of the Macro process you must include an "Export" command (such as Export as WAV).
The Export command will use the settings you used the last time you used the same command from the File > Export > Export... menu command, or default settings if you have never used that command from the menu.
In many cases the parameters for each command in the Macro can be specified within the Manage Macros dialog.
You can:
Add or remove commands for the selected Macro
Change the order in which the commands execute in the Macro
Edit the parameters for some effects in the Macro
Insert: Insert a new command into the list
Edit...: Edit the parameters of the currently selected command
Delete: Delete the currently selected command in the list
Move Up: Move the currently selected command up in the list
Move Down: Move the currently selected command down in the list
Save: This button is only active when you have made edits to a Macro. It enables you to save those changes.
You can also edit an existing command by double-clicking it, or using the Up or Down keyboard arrow to select it and then pressing Space. The parameter settings dialog for that command will be displayed.
A few commands are intentionally omitted from the Macro Manager (such as Close:) because they are unsuitable for use in Macros.
To insert a new command in a Macro, left-click or use the Up or Down keyboard arrow to select an existing command and then press Insert. The new command will be placed above this selected command.
The Select Command dialog appears, listing all the available commands. Double-click a command from the list to insert it in the "Command" box, as shown in the image below after inserting "Normalize".
Alternatively, use the Up or Down keyboard arrow to select the command, then press Space.
The full list of all commands, with descriptions, is available at Scripting Reference.
Some scriptable commands are particularly useful for Macros. See these pages for details:
Extra Menu: Scriptables I - most commonly useful scriptables.
Extra Menu: Scriptables II - less commonly useful scriptables, but also including Select and Set Track, which combine functionality of several scriptables.
If the command has editable parameters, the Edit Parameters button will be active. Clicking this button will bring up the dialog box for the effect where you can set the parameters as if you were applying the standalone effect.
If you have previously created user presets for an effect you can use the Use Preset to select one for use with that effect in the Macro.
Choose OK in the effect dialog to accept the parameters you entered, or Cancel to revert to the default parameters.
Choose OK in the Select Command dialog to add the command to the Macro.
It is strongly recommended that you set parameters for the commands that you use in a Macro. Otherwise Audacity will use the last-used parameter setting(s) when you ran the effect(s) manually.
Also note carefully that settings used in Macros will not affect or change the last-used parameter settings for any effect when next run manually.
This example shows the Set Track Status command.
The tick boxes on the left determines whether a feature should be used. When not selected, that feature does nothing.
The second tick box determines whether the feature is set to "on" or "off".
This shows:
The track name will not be changed
Track selectedness will be set to Not Selected
Track focus will be set to Focused
Commands that call Effects, Generators, Analyzers or Tools, use the same familiar graphical interface (GUI) as appears when they are used from the normal top level menus.
Many of the other commands provide a simple GUI comprised of checkboxes and text entry boxes. Typical examples can be seen in the Scriptables I and Scriptables II menus.
Macros will work on pre-existing selections you make in your project prior to running the Macro. But the selection can be over-ridden by your Macro itself as there are Macro commands available to effect selections in the audio.
In particular All(Select All) will select the entire project
Select which is parameterizable (see the provided Fade Ends Macro for an example where the first and last one seconds of the audio are selected for the fades).
If you want to select all tracks, maintaining your current time selection, use "Select: First=0 Last=100". It will not waste time twiddling its thumbs on the tracks that are not there.
When applying a Macro to files there is no pre-existing selection so you will need to create a selection in the Macro if your Macro requires audio to be selected to act on (and most Macros do).
There are four basic export commands available: Export as WAV, Export as MP3, Export as FLAC and Export as Ogg.
See Macros Palette for details of naming and location of exported files.
Parameters for export formats cannot be set in Manage Macros. To configure export parameters for the Macro, click File > Export > Export Audio... to access the Export Audio Dialog, click Options, set the parameters, press OK then Cancel the export. An audio track must be on screen in order to open the Export Audio Dialog.
There is also a special Export command Export2 which enables you to export to a specific target file and format. When using Export2 you have to give the full file name (including path and filename extension).
Note carefully that the filename is not dynamically changeable when running the Macro, once set in the Export2 parameters, so you may wish to create several Macros the Export2 each targeting different file locations, names and filetype.
Example:
"C:\Users\<username>\Desktop\my file.flac" (this works)
Not: C:\Users\<username>\Desktop\my file.flac (the file name is not quoted)
Not: "my file.flac" (no path given)
Not: "C:\Users\<username>\Desktop\myfile" (no file extension)
The quote marks around the file pathing are supplied by Audacity once the Export2 command has been edited in setting up or editing the Macro
When entering the pathing data in the edit parameters dialog for the command you do not put the quote marks for example: C:\Users\<username>\Desktop\my file.flac
The following two commands are now deprecated and may well be removed in future versions of Audacity. They were part of "CleanSpeech" (which has long been removed from Audacity).
The Export as MP3 56k before and Export as MP3 56k after commands can be used respectively to export "before" and "after" MP3 files at 56 kbps bit rate at any point in the Macro processing. This allows you to compare the result of one or more effects, or provide files for different purposes with and without a particular effect.
The name of the MP3 exported by the "Export as MP3 56k before" command is prefixed by "MasterBefore_" followed by the date and time. The name of the MP3 exported by the "Export as MP3 56k after" command is prefixed by "MasterAfter_" followed by the date and time.
Comments be added to Macros to enable you to document what is happening in the Macro.
Add a comment to your macro using the Comment command and edit its parameters to type the text of your comment.
Use the Shrink button to show a reduced Macros Palette dialog with a simple list of the existing Macros, enabling you to apply the Macros but not edit them.
This smaller version is useful for presets. It stays open after applying a macro, so it is a palette of custom functions, and you can pick another and apply that.
Using the Expand button on this reduced dialog will return you to the full Manage Macros dialog.
For more details see the Macros Palette page.
Apply Macro to enables you to make a Macro operate on either your current open Project or a set of selected external Files.
It is recommended not to process more than 500 files at a time
See Macros Palette for details of how these two buttons operate.
To dismiss the dialog simply click on the Close button.
If there any unsaved changes you will be asked if you want to save them or not.
See the Macros Examples page for examples of using Macros.
This error may sometimes occur for one or more commands in a Macro when updating from a previous Audacity version. The error may also occur if users sharing Macro have different Audacity versions or different versions of the plugins used in the Macro. The error will occur if:
any command in the Macro uses a different text format than that recognized by the version of Audacity in use
any plugins listed in the Macro are missing, in an incorrect location or are incompatible with the version of Audacity in use.
To resolve these errors, ensure you have compatible versions of all required plugins and that the plugins are installed correctly. If necessary, use the Manage Macros dialog to delete the command that fails then insert a replacement command for the same effect from the Select Command dialog.