With sound editors like e.g. Adobe Audition you can mark individual points and regions within an audio recording, and store these markers (cues) together with an arbitrary label and a description in a special list, called cue list. By a double-click on the entries in the cue list, the cue points or regions can later be located and played back very quickly. But as useful as this feature is – unfortunately, it also has some disadvantages: Cue lists exist only for WAV files, but not for other types of audio files like e.g. MP3. Secondly, the cue list is stored directly inside the WAV file, i.e. it can't be stored independently of the WAV file. This results in some limitations concerning its usage: For instance, in order to send a cue list to another person, you'll have to send the complete WAV file, which can perhaps be several hundrets of MB big. Or if you want to archive the cue list, you'll have to preserve the whole WAV file.
With Cue List Tool 1.7 you can:
Copy the Cue List from one WAV file into another WAV file.
Export the Cue List from a WAV file to a separate small file (Cue List file).
Write the Cues from a Cue List file into a WAV file.
Display the Cue List as text in a user-definable format.
Transfer the Cue List as text to the clipboard oder save it as a plain text or RTF file.
Create Cue Sheets for CD burning software to divide big audio files into individual CD tracks.
Download Cue List Tool 1.7 for Windows