On Tue, 24 Feb 2004, Casey Heshler wrote: > > rate is 22050Hz rather than 44100Hz. What you're describing sounds > > about like an octave lower than normal. > > > > jch > > But, wouldn't this cause the exported "file" to be played on the system the > same as when the same "file" is burned to a cd? I can edit, export, open, > re-edit, export - many times - and until I burn that file onto a cd, that > file plays fine on the system (as a file).
No. A .wav file has as part of its header the rate at which the file should be played. Any software will use that rate, not the cd rate of 44100. > > Cuddles > ps - the "Sample Rate" is 44.1KHz, the "Spectrograms -> FFT Size=256 - default > -> Maximum Frequency (Hz):" - which they state, should be "half" of what the > "Sample Rate" is - is 22050Hz. Should I diss the documentation, and set the > Maximum Frequency ALSO to 44100 Hz ??? Thanks for the quick reply also :) No. In an fft, there is only info from 0 Hz to half the sampling rate. ------------------------------------------------------- SF.Net is sponsored by: Speed Start Your Linux Apps Now. Build and deploy apps & Web services for Linux with a free DVD software kit from IBM. Click Now! http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=1356&alloc_id=3438&op=click _______________________________________________ Alsa-user mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/alsa-user