Is there any way you can think of on how you could put music blocks in scratch and turn them into a sound file? Even a nonprofessional way will do. Please help as I need this answered quick!
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mmww wrote:
Are you recording them through scratch? If so, just record it then go to sounds. And right click your sound then choose export.
Not really what I mean. I have made the sound with sound blocks. What I mean is do you have any tricks? I know there would probably be no actual way with saving it or whatever, and I have tried the headphones-to mic thing, but Audacity didn't pick up very much.
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You could use a screenrecorder (Camstudio, Hypercam etc.) to do this. All you simply have to do:
1) Open up your screenrecorder. Make sure recording audio from the pc/laptop is on and NOT the mic!
2) Open your scratch project, and add a 3 second delay (wait for [3] seconds block) on the script where the music plays.
3) Start the script where the music is produced.
4) Quickly open your screenrecorder and press record.
5) After the music is finished, stop the recording.
6) Save the file as a .wav, .avi, anything but .swf.
7) Open up Windows Movie Maker (Or any video editing software) and separate the audio from the visual (the screen)
8) Delete the visual
9) Tadadada! Done!
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Servine wrote:
You could use a screenrecorder (Camstudio, Hypercam etc.) to do this. All you simply have to do:
1) Open up your screenrecorder. Make sure recording audio from the pc/laptop is on and NOT the mic!
2) Open your scratch project, and add a 3 second delay (wait for [3] seconds block) on the script where the music plays.
3) Start the script where the music is produced.
4) Quickly open your screenrecorder and press record.
5) After the music is finished, stop the recording.
6) Save the file as a .wav, .avi, anything but .swf.
7) Open up Windows Movie Maker (Or any video editing software) and separate the audio from the visual (the screen)
8) Delete the visual
9) Tadadada! Done!
Thank You!!!
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CanadianGeorge wrote:
Servine wrote:
You could use a screenrecorder (Camstudio, Hypercam etc.) to do this. All you simply have to do:
1) Open up your screenrecorder. Make sure recording audio from the pc/laptop is on and NOT the mic!
2) Open your scratch project, and add a 3 second delay (wait for [3] seconds block) on the script where the music plays.
3) Start the script where the music is produced.
4) Quickly open your screenrecorder and press record.
5) After the music is finished, stop the recording.
6) Save the file as a .wav, .avi, anything but .swf.
7) Open up Windows Movie Maker (Or any video editing software) and separate the audio from the visual (the screen)
8) Delete the visual
9) Tadadada! Done!Thank You!!!
Did it work or are you just happy you found a (hopefully) working solution?
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