Clicks are most often CPU / buffer related problems, however. On my
laptop, for instance, I have to disable the wireless card if I want to
use even a very simple PD patch and not get clicks, for example. I
have to disable it for using other audio apps, also - but the problems
in PD are always more severe than any other audio program.

~David

On 11/28/06, day 5 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Consider that digital audio is represented simply as instantaneous
pressure values for the speaker membrane. This problem is actually
quite common when you change from a positive or negative pressure value
to a null crossing in the space of one sample.

The solution is to use some kind of envelope generator scaling before
passing your audio output to the [dac~].


./d5

On Nov 28, 2006, at 9:01 AM, hard off wrote:

> has anybody else experienced small clicks every now and then from pd's
> oscillators?
>
> i have noticed it before with [phasor~], and today i was getting it
> pretty badly with [cos~]..about 1 click every 10 seconds.
>
> this is nothing to do with the contents of the patch, because just a
> [cos~] connected to a [dac~] was making the same thing happen.
> ...it's nothing to do with dac~ or my sound hardware either, because
> disconnecting the [cos~] from the [dac~] stopped the clicks.
>
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