it's an OS thing, you can set it somewhere so it doenst open the latest
files, someone showed how to do it here, cant remeber though :P
2014-03-13 12:41 GMT-03:00 i go bananas :
> pd 0.42.5
>
>
> ...so it got fixed???
>
>
> i don't like updating, cos if it ain't broke, don't fix itbut maybe
Hi Roman. This is turning out trickier than I thought. A friend explained
the code to me and got to the following equation, with min/max values as
0.01 and 1 respectively.
[expr 0.01 * exp((log(1 / 0.01) / 0.01) * $f1 * 0.01)]
For what I've checked, it seems to behave like your patch. But it does
Any digital instrument also has latencies. Basically it is a matter of
playing the instrument you are using.
How are you measuring the latency?
with a digital instrument, in this context, it has to be from the time the
gesture is made that controls the effect, till the effect is heard by the
BTW, not to overstate the obvious, but...
A good way to measure total latency is with an oscilloscope. Hook up one
probe to the mic, the other probe to a wire coming out of an output on
your device. Then make a patch that sends the sound straight through, eg:
[dac~]
|
[adc~]
If you stimulate
On 03/16/2014 05:33 AM, Simon Iten wrote:
[...]
Any digital instrument also has latencies. Basically it is a matter of playing
the instrument you are using.
How are you measuring the latency?
-Jonathan
Simon
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Also, for an electric guitar player, the difference between the latency you
get with an analog amp (not perceivable) and a computer with more than
10(?)ms latency, is very big. Maybe around 10ms would be "ideal", but
haven't reached that (yet?), but would really love to.
On Sun, Mar 16, 2014 at 1
well, i play a lot in an orchestra. (doublebass) and i can assure you it’s a
problem you don’t get used to. (and that is not just me) sure you can adapt to
the situation but it is not ideal. let a pipe organ player play with a
conductor and orchestra and the fun begins :-) it works but it needs