I have a vanilla spectroscope abstraction: g_spectroscope. It's pretty simple 
and good enough for showing a graph, not really for scientific precision. There 
are also update & dimension controls plus you can turn it off to save CPU.

https://github.com/danomatika/rc-patches/tree/master/rc 
<https://github.com/danomatika/rc-patches/tree/master/rc>

> On Jan 20, 2022, at 6:01 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> 
> Date: Thu, 20 Jan 2022 16:46:02 +0000
> From: Pierre Alexandre Tremblay <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>>
> To: Pd-List <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
> Subject: [PD] A strange question (yet again)
> Message-ID: <[email protected] 
> <mailto:[email protected]>>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
> 
> Sorry again for my obsessions with pd-vanilla which makes everything harder - 
> this one might be impossible!
> 
> I?m trying to draw a spectrogram in pd-vanilla to match our waveform 
> visualisation options in FluCoMa for Max and SuperCollider. I saw the example 
> with the peaks in the documentation, and did myself a sort of grid of objects 
> (arrays) but the former is not precise enough and the latter was clogging the 
> machine as you might imagine?
> 
> As I am not the best Pd coder, although getting less worse by the day thanks 
> to you all, I just want to confirm that it is definitely no possible in any 
> other way than doing the structure of arrays of rectangles.
> 
> Any pointer welcome (pun intended again)
> 
> p

--------
Dan Wilcox
@danomatika <http://twitter.com/danomatika>
danomatika.com <http://danomatika.com/>
robotcowboy.com <http://robotcowboy.com/>



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