![]() ![]() What I would recommend to you, though, is to split the FLAC using Foobar and convert the tracks. Now you should be able to play the CUE file and see all the metadata without garbled symbols! (change "m圜ueFile.txt" back to "m圜ueFile.cue")Ħ. Rename the TXT file so that it has the CUE extension again. In the window that pops up make sure to select UTF-8 as the encoding and then save the file to any name you want.ĥ. Now go back to Notepad and select "File > Save as". ![]() Open "m圜ueFile.txt" with Notepad and delete all the text in it, then paste the text you copied from MS Word.Ĥ. Now select all the text in MS Word and copy it. If you selected the right text encoding, you should be able to see the contents of the CUE file in MS Word without garbled symbols. Select "Other encoding" and it should recognize that your txt file contains Chinese characters and will automatically select the correct encoding (in your case, it's probably "Chinese Simplified").ģ. When you try to open it with MS Word it will prompt you to choose a text encoding. Change the CUE's file extension to ".txt" For example rename "m圜ueFile.cue" to "m圜ueFile.txt"Ģ. ![]() I often have this problem since I have several Japanese and a couple Chinese albums. ![]()
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