Lossless: Difference between revisions

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'''Lossless compression''' is a compression methodology in which the result of the compression can be restored faithfully, i.e. bit-by-bit identical with the uncompressed data.
Compression is '''lossless''' when decoding the compressed data gives a result which is identical bit-by-bit to the uncompressed original.


In a nutshell, it is somewhat like compressing a Waveform file with ZIP or RAR.
Generic file compression formats, like ZIP or RAR, are lossless. However, trying to compress raw audio with those generally results in files which are only slightly- if at all- smaller than the originals. Lossless audio formats take advantage of knowledge about real-world audio data to provide compression ratios averaging around 50% on most music.


The difference between 'mere' ZIP/RAR is that lossless compression algorithms are especially tuned and designed for the characteristics of Waveform data, thus achieving compression far greater than can be achieved by generic compression utilities.
[[Lossy]] encoders only attempt to approximate the sound of the original waveform rather than preserving all the information present in it. Losslessly compressed audio will therefore unavoidably be larger than audio compressed with any reasonable [[lossy]] encoder. However, this disadvantage is offset by lossless files' ability to be [[transcoding|transcoded]] to other lossless formats without any quality degradation.
 
As lossless compression preserves all information of the original Waveform file, audio compressed with lossless compression will unavoidably be larger than audio compressed with [[lossy]] compression. However, this disadvantage is more than offset by lossless' ability to be [[transcoding|transcoded]] to other lossless format '''without''' any quality degradation.


== Popular lossless formats ==
== Popular lossless formats ==

Revision as of 00:09, 2 March 2012

Compression is lossless when decoding the compressed data gives a result which is identical bit-by-bit to the uncompressed original.

Generic file compression formats, like ZIP or RAR, are lossless. However, trying to compress raw audio with those generally results in files which are only slightly- if at all- smaller than the originals. Lossless audio formats take advantage of knowledge about real-world audio data to provide compression ratios averaging around 50% on most music.

Lossy encoders only attempt to approximate the sound of the original waveform rather than preserving all the information present in it. Losslessly compressed audio will therefore unavoidably be larger than audio compressed with any reasonable lossy encoder. However, this disadvantage is offset by lossless files' ability to be transcoded to other lossless formats without any quality degradation.

Popular lossless formats

Oddball Formats

There are several old lossless formats that aren't really deserving of having an article all for themselves. Reasons are: lack of widespread support, lack of features, bad efficiency and, most importantly, it seems noone is really interested in them.

Most of those would have disappeared by now, but they are being preserved for posterity at rjamorim's ReallyRareWares

Advanced Digital Audio (ADA)
Marian's a-Pac
AudioZip
Dakx WAV
Entis Lab MIO
LiteWave
Pegasus SPS
RKaudio
Split2000
Sonarc
VocPack
WavArc
WaveZip/MUSICompress

Note that currently no single format can be considered best for all applications. Rather, the best format depends on the intended use, as well as a number of other factors (such as licensing and file structure). For example, Shorten and FLAC are widely used for sharing live music because of their cross-platform support and speed. Monkey's Audio is popular among Windows users for its superior compression ratio.

Comparisons

Note the specific assumptions and limitations of each comparison; in particular, results are sensitive to the music selected'

http://web.inter.nl.net/users/hvdh/lossless/lossless.htm
Includes an interesting graph of encode/decode speeds vs. file size on the All Albums page
Lossless comparison
A comparision focusing more on codec features and less on absolute encoding efficiency. Also features a table comparing most popular codecs based on their features.
http://members.home.nl/w.speek/comparison.htm
Performance Comparison of Lossless Audio Compressors - Compares file size, encode speed, decode speed for APE, FLAC, LPAC, WavPack, Shorten (SHN), RKAU, OptimFROG, LA, WMA Lossless. Updated 5-2003
http://www.bobulous.org.uk/misc/lossless_audio_2006.html
Lossless audio formats - A comparison of the rip-and-encode speed and album file size of six different lossless formats: uncompressed Wave, FLAC, WavPack, Shorten, Monkey's Audio, and OptimFROG. First published on 22nd May 2006.

External Links