No, .flp save files are opened in FL Studio only, you can however load up FL Studio and use it as a VST within another sequencer of your choice, so you could use FL Studio as a VST within Cubase for example and then load up your .flp project file with all the playback going into Cubase.
FTP stands for file transfer protocol
Just like any FLP file, you can open and edit any part of it, demo or otherwise, although you can not save in the demo version. Having said that, if you have the full version of FL Studio, the file can be saved, though you can not claim it as your own work if you wish to sell or broadcast the track without the original composer's permission.
It is very possible to convert MP3 music to FLP files. To do so all you have to do is open up the FLP program and click and drag all files that you want to convert and then convert them.
If you export a complete song that uses samples and default FL Studio plugins as a zipped loop package, then the FLP file along with all samples used can me loaded from any source and played on someone else's FL Studio.
No you can't. Only FLP files can be reloaded as FL Studio projects. When a song is exported as an MP3, it is compiled as a single audio source for playback only. You can export the song to MP3 and tell FL Studio to split the tracks into separate audio files, you can only then reimport the individual files as audio clips. However, if you created any of the audio with effects in place, they will be in the audio file permanently and adding more effects to the audio clips may make them sound worse.
You cannot convert a mp3 file into a flp file. But maybe in your fruityloops project, you can import a mp3. If not, convert the mp3 into a .wav file. I haven't used Floops in years, I use Cubase now. Try inporting the audio file. Let me know if that helped.
FL Studio is not a tool that strips the original individual tracks from an MP3 or OGG file. You need to use a proper audio editor like Sony SoundForge (now obsolete on Windows 7), Audacity or Adobe Audition, but even doing so is a difficult task. It is easier to strip vocals away from the music. However, if it is a proper FL Studio made FLP file, you can turn on and off any track, mixer channel or effect as you see fit and export whatever part you want.
FLP is the extension of an FL Studio project. If you want one as a template, they need to be created as such and placed in the "Templates" folder to be used in future projects. If you want FLP demos to use as something to work from, then it is not a template as such, just someone else's work.How it works is like this:Create an instrument channelAssign an effects rack to itLoad the desired effects for it into the effects rackTweak the instrument and effect parameters for the sound you needRinse and repeat for new channels, sounds or percussionOnce you find a group of instruments and sounds you need for an entire song, save it as an FLP in the "Templates" folder. Future projects used from there will never be saved there, FL will save the projects elsewhere and the template will be safe to reuse. You may be lucky to find some online, but you don't want every song sounding the same, so you would need to change them often.
Family Limited Partnership
No it does not.
yes