Home › Forums › Products › Stompboxes › Opening h9z files in H9 App
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November 7, 2014 at 4:38 pm #112069bodhijamesMember
Hey Everyone,
Feeling rather dumb having to ask…
I've searched the interwebs including TGP and still haven't found out how to load/open h9z files in the H9 app. I'm using it on a Win7 PC.
Side note, I didn't have any problems connecting via Bluetooth!
Any help with the h9z files would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks!
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November 7, 2014 at 4:52 pm #126941gkellumParticipant
bodhijames:
I've searched the interwebs including TGP and still haven't found out how to load/open h9z files in the H9 app. I'm using it on a Win7 PC.
If you click on the Settings button in the bottom right corner of H9 Control and go to Import Presets or Preset Lists, clicking the import button in that screen will open a file browser which you can use to select an H9Z or SYX file. But in the coming release of H9 Control, you'll be able to just drag and drop an H9Z (or SYX) file onto the app.
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November 7, 2014 at 4:58 pm #126942bodhijamesMember
Excellent, thanks for the speedy response. Looking forward to the HP App update.
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November 7, 2014 at 6:52 pm #126945Billy FoppianoParticipant
ANY way we can SAVE to a file so we can manipulate the Preset names and create a table of presets? Like in Factorlib?
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November 7, 2014 at 7:03 pm #137578gkellumParticipant
Billy Foppiano:
ANY way we can SAVE to a file so we can manipulate the Preset names and create a table of presets? Like in Factorlib?
Well, you can export a preset or a preset list or all of your user data. The H9Z files mentioned earlier in this thread are just zip files which if renamed to .zip can be opened.
But if you want to change preset names, you can rename presets directly in H9 Control. If you want a table of presets, you could go directly to where H9 Control stores its files and use command line tools to create one. One of my colleagues asked me yesterday to create a file list of all of the factory presets bundled with H9 Control; you can do that for instance on Mac with a command like:
ls -m1 *>> file-list.txt
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