It'd be grat to have some kind of graphic equaliser and
spectrum analyser in ssm. I wish I knew something
about FFT!
Discussion
Anonymous
-
2003-12-16
priority: 5 --> 3
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Anonymous
-
2004-02-01
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You can get some clues of how this should be done from Steve
Harris' Plugins. As he includes a graphic equaliser and lots
of other stuff that uses an fftw library.
If you would like to refer to this comment somewhere else in this project, copy and paste the following link:
Anonymous
-
2004-04-05
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This could be really useful for tracking down and eliminating
(e.g.) background noise in samples.
If the spectrum analyser's "L.E.D. ladders" were paired with
the graphic equalizer's sliders, you could get instant feedback
on your operations.
The next phase would be to make the display zoom-able.
Initially the dispay/interface would cover the whole audio
spectrum in fairly wide bands.
Zooming would be enabled by clicking on something
associated with a given "L.E.D. lader"/slider (e.g. a button
above it) which would make the whole display "zoom-in" on
just that one frequency band - with much narrower bands
and so on.
That way you could track down a particular peak in the
frequency-spectrum with increasing degrees of precision
If you would like to refer to this comment somewhere else in this project, copy and paste the following link:
Logged In: YES
user_id=637096
You can get some clues of how this should be done from Steve
Harris' Plugins. As he includes a graphic equaliser and lots
of other stuff that uses an fftw library.
Logged In: YES
user_id=637096
This could be really useful for tracking down and eliminating
(e.g.) background noise in samples.
If the spectrum analyser's "L.E.D. ladders" were paired with
the graphic equalizer's sliders, you could get instant feedback
on your operations.
The next phase would be to make the display zoom-able.
Initially the dispay/interface would cover the whole audio
spectrum in fairly wide bands.
Zooming would be enabled by clicking on something
associated with a given "L.E.D. lader"/slider (e.g. a button
above it) which would make the whole display "zoom-in" on
just that one frequency band - with much narrower bands
and so on.
That way you could track down a particular peak in the
frequency-spectrum with increasing degrees of precision