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file naming explanation

#2
by pyp1 - opened

does the last digit in the id indicate the order of the segment in the original book/audio? for example id_A: large/10022/essayoncriticism_1505_librivox_64kb_mp3/essayoncriticism_03_pope_64kb_7 ends with 7 and id_B: large/10022/essayoncriticism_1505_librivox_64kb_mp3/essayoncriticism_03_pope_64kb_8 ends with 8, and this means that id_A is right before id_B in the book?

It seems that this is not the case because id_A's starting timestamp is 51.04 while id_B's starting timestamp is 434.6.

If so, given a id, is there a way to find it's neighboring segments?

Thanks!

Owner

If so, given a id, is there a way to find it's neighboring segments?

I think you can only sort the durations and find the neighboring segments with algorithms like binary search.

BTW, why do you need neighboring segments?

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