Devices Preferences

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Devices PreferencesPlayback PreferencesRecording PreferencesQuality PreferencesInterface PreferencesTracks PreferencesImport/Export PreferencesExtended Import PreferencesProjects PreferencesLibraries PreferencesSpectrograms PreferencesDirectories PreferencesWarnings PreferencesEffects PreferencesKeyboard PreferencesMouse Preferencesimage of Devices Preferences window
Click on any of the other Preferences sections in the above image to go directly to that Preferences page.

Interface

Selects the particular interface with which Audacity communicates with your chosen playback and recording devices.

On Windows, the choice is between the following audio interfaces.

  • MME: This is the Audacity default and the most compatible with all audio devices.
  • Windows DirectSound: This is more recent than MME with potentially less latency.
  • Windows WASAPI: This host only appears on Windows Vista, Windows 7 and Windows 8. The only inputs that are currently provided are "loopback" inputs for recording computer playback. 24-bit recording devices are supported. Output is emulated using this host. As a result, the output slider in Mixer Toolbar will only scale the system output slider's current level up or down rather than directly manipulating that system slider.

On Mac OS X the only choice is Core Audio.

On Linux there is often only one option: ALSA. Other options could be OSS and/or Jack Audio Connection Kit (also known as "Jack" or "Jackd").

  • On Windows XP or earlier (given a recent computer), DirectSound's much shorter path to the hardware should produce much lower latency than MME.
  • On Windows Vista, Windows 7 and Windows 8:
    • Windows DirectSound may by default have only slightly lower latency than MME.
    • Selecting Windows DirectSound or Windows WASAPI and enabling both "Exclusive Mode" boxes in Windows Sound allows Audacity to request audio direct from the device without resampling.

Playback

  • Device: Selects the device used for playback.

Recording

  • Device: Selects the device used for recording.
On Windows, each entry for recording device consists of the input type (such as microphone), followed by the name of the audio device the input belongs to. If you have multiple audio devices, the list will be grouped so that inputs of each device are grouped together. The input level of the selected device can be adjusted in Mixer Toolbar, but device selection is no longer made there.
  • Channels: 1 (Mono), 2 (Stereo) or the number of channels that are provided by the drivers of your sound device. On most inbuilt sound devices, especially on Windows, only mono or stereo will be available. For some devices on Windows, choosing Windows DirectSound in "Host" above may be more likely to reveal options for recording more than two channels. On some devices capable of recording more than two channels, an explicit "multi" device may appear in the "Device" drop-down for recording all the channels simultaneously.
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