I think there was mention of DC offset from plug-ins, where you may want
to observe a +/- DC offset which could could miss with an absolute
display.  Mainly I would think this would be for tuning plugins or finding
errors in them.  I cannot think of any advantage to a DC offset, only the
disadvantge of decreasing your dynamic range.

Rick




On Wed, 28 Feb 2001, Robert Schrem wrote:

> > > Well I think you need only to compute one peak value for a
> > > sample data block: Max = abs(all samples for a block)
> > > I still don't understan what information we gan if we compute
> > > seperate min and max peak values.
> >
> > But what about waveforms that have a certain DC offset? (That's SoundForge
> > spead, but Steve Harris used the same term for one of his LADSPA plugins,
> > so I believe it's commonly used). There is no guarantee that a waveform is
> > well-balanced over the zero axis, so you might find cases where the
> > positive part is well within ranges while the negative part is already
> > clipping.
> 
> <ExtensiveExplainMode DetailLevel="max">
> DC offset stands for 'direct current' offset 
> (AC means 'alternating current' - AC/DC, the band name 
> formed from this :) 
> 
> It means that all samples have a constant drift in 
> one direction - often a result of a drifting reverence 
> voltage source inside the AD converter's circuit. 
> 
> This was an issue with older AD converters: Even if you 
> short circuit the input of the AD the converter it
> would still not output 0 values as expected - instead 
> they delivered a small value that even changed with the 
> temperature of your equipment.
> 
> As far as i know this isn't a issue for some years now - 
> the today converters are more sofisticated and don't produce 
> DC offsets. They have digital high pass filters built 
> inside (with very low filter frequency). This avoids that 
> any constant offset will be output by the converter. 
> (This also means, that you can't measure DC voltages directly 
> with an AD converter build for audio purposes). 
> </ExtensiveExplainMode>
> 
> Anyway: Even if you would care about DC offset you would 
> still recognize ANY clipping if we only compute the 
> absolut maxima of an set of samples. For positive signed 
> samples as well as for negative signed ones.
> 
> robby
> 

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