> I have some newbie questions here...
> 
> why is it that [*] is only for floats, whereas if you want to multiply two 
> signals one has to use [*~] ?
> And then why is it that [*~] can multiply a signal by a float, but [*] can't 
> do that?

because according to Pd rules its not OK to confuse the user with seperate 
objects/operators for floats vs ints or symbols vs strings, but ok for signals 
vs floats?

why is it that [*] can't multiply a list by an integer? or is that what you 
mean by signal, a list of floats?

> And then why is it that [*~] can't multiply a float by a signal, the signal 
> has to be on the left? Why is it that if I want to divide a float by a 
> signal, then I have to 
> explicitly cast the float to signal (using [sig~]) or use [expr~] ?

the main reason i can think of is it's a lossy operation if the return value is 
a float. what value for the signal are you operating on - the value of the 
first sample in the DSP block? the average of all the samples in the block? the 
* vs *~ distinction might be useful to specify a desired return type..

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