PSPunch wrote: > [phasor~] takes a range of 0 to 1. > To fully drive your speakers, you may want to insert a [-~ 0.5] after > [phasor~] so that you get a range of -0.5 to 0.5, centered at zero. > You can then multiply the amplitude by 2 (instead of 1 which you > currently have your slider range set to) > oh, right! after some time not playing with pd I forgot about this and thought a phasor as a nornmal oscillator (in the range -1...1)
> By multiplying the source with a hanning window, you are actually > applying a kind of an amplitude modulation. Artifacts caused by this > procedure may become a little more apparent when you use live sounds for > input. > uhm... actually, *not* using the hanning window, makes the processed sound suck even more. so what's the best solution? there is a better window function? perhaps the gaussian function? isn't the window function also related on how much samples overlap between a block and the next one? shouldn't fft~ be aware of this? ciao _______________________________________________ Pd-list@iem.at mailing list UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list