I've looked seriously at data structures for the first time, and saw what Chris McCormick did with them, and I believe this is the way to go !
Cheers, Pierre. 2014-03-03 8:44 GMT+01:00 Billy Stiltner <billy.stilt...@gmail.com>: > seems like there was something about the way i made the wave editor that > worked,i never tried overflowing the the things and my method is a hack of > the pd file @xensynth and the lfo editor, otherwise holler at Mike Booth > ala mmb. > > > https://archive.org/search.php?query=uploader%3A%22billy.stiltner%40gmail.com%22&sort=-publicdate > > > On Mon, Mar 3, 2014 at 2:34 AM, Pierre Massat <pimas...@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Hi Jonathan, >> >> I found it following this path : help for [tabwrite] --> More_Info --> >> all_about_arrays --> Common uses for arrays in Pd >> Bummer, I thought somebody would come up with a secret table manipulation >> technique that would make this statement true... >> >> Cheers, >> >> Pierre. >> >> >> 2014-03-02 19:33 GMT+01:00 Jonathan Wilkes <jancs...@yahoo.com>: >> >> From that help patch: >>> #X text 12 115 HELP_PATCH_AUTHORS Updated for Pd 0.38-2. Jonathan Wilkes >>> revised the patch to conform to the PDDP template for Pd version 0.42. >>> >>> I did the refactoring of that patch, but I'm not sure who wrote what >>> you're quoting. >>> >>> I'd say that statement is false and should be removed. >>> >>> -Jonathan >>> >>> >>> On Sunday, March 2, 2014 10:47 AM, Pierre Massat <pimas...@gmail.com> >>> wrote: >>> Dear list, >>> >>> I am working on a small patch which stores simple events in a table to >>> trigger sounds later on. >>> I would like to be able to edit the content of my table easily, which >>> requires scrolling it, zooming in, and eventually editing the content. >>> >>> I have found away of scrolling the content, but it is very slow with >>> relatively big tables (hem, even with a table with 20 000 samples...). >>> Please see the example attached. >>> >>> I have 2 questions : >>> 1) Is there a more efficient way of doing this ? Copying only part of >>> the content is worse (i've tried). >>> 2) Can I prevent the content of the table from spilling over the table >>> to right of the left ? I get the same behaviour in a GOP, and putting a >>> canvas next to the table to cover it doesn't work because the table content >>> gets redrawn on top of it. >>> >>> This leads me to a more general question about something i've found in >>> the help : >>> "5 Wave editing: with proper manipulation of array data, Pd can be fully >>> functional wave editor, complete with mouse-clickable cut-n-paste, >>> pitch-shift, time expansion, down/upsampling, and other tools typically >>> found in commercial wave editors." >>> This has always sounded very appealing to me, but i wonder how realistic >>> this statement is... unless i'm ignoring 80 % of what can be done with >>> tables in Pd. >>> >>> Cheers, >>> >>> Pierre. >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Pd-list@iem.at mailing list >>> UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> >>> http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list >>> >>> >>> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Pd-list@iem.at mailing list >> UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> >> http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list >> >> >
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