thumbs up.
:)
Mensaje telepatico asistido por maquinas.
On 6/25/2021 6:28 PM, hans w. koch wrote:
yes, of course :-)
i stated here for [div] and [mod]:
https://lists.puredata.info/pipermail/pd-list/2020-09/128152.html
and on git: https://github.com/pure-data/pure-data/issues/1150
Am 25.06.2021 um 23:20 schrieb Lucas Cordiviola <lucard...@hotmail.com>:
not every object is double ready though in my experience.
It would be very useful if you tell whats not ready. Either here on the "list"
or issues on https://github.com/pure-data/pure-data/issues
:)
Mensaje telepatico asistido por maquinas.
On 6/25/2021 6:01 PM, hans w. koch wrote:
yes, i am already using pd double.
not every object is double ready though in my experience.
sometimes hard to tell apart...
@alexandre: thanks for the offer to file a feature request for the helpfile
change.
i can do it too, but wasn´t sure if i should flood the long list with this
trivia.
best
hans
Am 25.06.2021 um 22:41 schrieb Lucas Cordiviola <lucard...@hotmail.com>:
Also, all numbers in Pd are 32-bit floats while all numbers in JS are 64-bit
doubles.
I might be missing something but Hans said he was using "vanilla double"
--
Mensaje telepatico asistido por maquinas.
On 6/25/2021 5:30 PM, Christof Ressi wrote:
or maybe another case of limitation on the display-side of things?
This.
Also, all numbers in Pd are 32-bit floats while all numbers in JS are 64-bit
doubles.
Christof
On 25.06.2021 21:27, hans w. koch wrote:
today to my amazement, i discovered, that the midi decimals in mtof equal cents
:-)
sorry, for stating the obvious. better late then never, at least for me…i
literally hit my head when i recognized this.
i´ve searched the archives for "mtof cents” and didn´t find a mention of this.
now that i´ve outed myself as a dummie, forward on with one suggestion:
wouldn´t it be helpful for future slowfoxes like me, to mention that somehow in
mtofs helpfile?
at the moment it reads: You can specify microtonal pitches as in "69.5" (a
quarter tone higher than 69).
my suggestion would be to add: The decimals specify cents as in .01 = 1 cent.
further question:
i am working in a recent pd vanilla double and was expecting to see more
decimals
e.g.
pd: 69.031 into mtof gives 440.789
javascript: 440 + 3.1 cent gives: 440.78858311490677
its not that i would claim to hear a difference between 440.789 and 440.7885
hz, but i could imagine cases, where working further these roundings accumulate.
or maybe another case of limitation on the display-side of things?
best
hans
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