Thanks to all for the replies.
I will investigate, then probabably come back...
-a-
PS: by chance I got two books by you on my desk:
your thesis on musical notation and the books on "Audio &
Multimedia". Congratulations, nice works!
PS: Really happy to hear form you. You're in a special
Hi Georg,
nice one! See it in action in the
attached patch ;-) (colored noise generation)
The only thing I would specify a bit better
is the inlet interface, "ON-OFF" may be misleading for a
newbie.. Definitely to be included in the extended PD.
Thanks for sharing,
Alberto Zin
http://puredata.
What I have been wanting to see is a nice time vs. frequency/amplitude spectrogram... like something that is very easy to do in matlab with the specgram function. The [sonogram~] object in the unauthorized library comes close, but it is difficult to know what is happening according to the picture
On Tue Nov 14, 2006 at 12:49:20AM -0800, Rich E wrote:
> What I have been wanting to see is a nice time vs. frequency/amplitude
> spectrogram... like something that is very easy to do in matlab with the
> specgram function. The [sonogram~] object in the unauthorized library
> comes close, but it
Hallo,
andrea valle hat gesagt: // andrea valle wrote:
> I was trying to understand if there's a(n easy) way to plot a spectrum.
> I guess it should be easily feasible, as I saw both pd capabilties in
> time domain, both Miller Puckette's figures in the book.
>
> But looking in docs and on the
Hallo!
That's a nice patch! It should be included in Pd-extended or somewhere
as a fully documented object. My only suggestion is that I think it
of course - you can include it!
should use 0.00 to 1.00 to represent the temporal percentage. Except
you are right ...
a more "beautiful" ver
That's a nice patch! It should be included in Pd-extended or
somewhere as a fully documented object. My only suggestion is that I
think it should use 0.00 to 1.00 to represent the temporal
percentage. Except for places where it doesn't make sense (e.g.
pitch/freq), I think all paramete
Hallo!
If you want to draw a logarithmic spectrum with only native pd objects
see the attached patch ...
LG
Georg
#N canvas 265 153 333 190 10;
#N canvas 88 49 872 789 FFT_Analyse 0;
#X obj 101 102 inlet~;
#X obj 101 332 *~;
#X obj 132 331 *~;
#X obj 110 356 +~;
#X obj 111 377 powtodb~;
#N can
Hi Andrea,
welcome! Simple spectrum computations can be found on the
documentation annexed with pd: look at
the subfolder /doc/3.audio.examples of your PD distribution
, for example E01.spectrum.pd. This uses simple fft
computations.
Then there is the cyclone library that has a good
spectrum visu
On Mon, 13 Nov 2006, andrea valle wrote:
I was trying to understand if there's a(n easy) way to plot a spectrum.
I guess it should be easily feasible, as I saw both pd capabilties in
time domain, both Miller Puckette's figures in the book.
But looking in docs and on the web I got confused and I
Hi to all,
newbie here.
I've just tweaked few times with PD as I prefer writing code than using
gui interface. In any case, I like a lot PD and it seems the best
candidate for my very short course in computer music here at the
university.
I was trying to understand if there's a(n easy) way
11 matches
Mail list logo