In fact it is a problem between Windows and VLC. VLC does not recognize the trailing "\" when calling the Audio CD from the windows interface and there is a trouble report on it, so hopefully it will get fixed in future releases.Oh wow it does work afterall !
I've been searching for a way to play cds myself for more than 2 months.
I must say it is not a user friendly way to open music cds. If someone has the time, it would be nice to open detect what kind of cd is being played, or somthing like that to avoid the user to select all these obscure options.
It works only if open it as D, E drive.I'm not sure I understand your question?
VLC does play audio CDs.
From within VLC, right click on the payer and choose, Open, Open Disk, then tick the box marked Audio CD. Change the drive letter if it is not correct and press OK.
From the command line (within the VLC directory) type, vlc cdda://D: and enter, where D: is the letter of the drive you have placed the CD.
Yup! I'm not aware of a player that works like that. All that is listed on the disk is contained in a TOC file and each of the files are 44 bites long they exist as pointers to the araw files on the disk. Believe it or not there are a number of reasons for doing it this way that are a bit to long to go into here.It works only if open it as D, E drive.I'm not sure I understand your question?
VLC does play audio CDs.
From within VLC, right click on the payer and choose, Open, Open Disk, then tick the box marked Audio CD. Change the drive letter if it is not correct and press OK.
From the command line (within the VLC directory) type, vlc cdda://D: and enter, where D: is the letter of the drive you have placed the CD.
What I mean was that's if you open as a file, browse for D drive and select an audio track (cda). VLC won't play.
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