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[Csnd] Re: Re: Csound Beginner

Date2010-02-05 16:25
From"Partev Barr Sarkissian"
Subject[Csnd] Re: Re: Csound Beginner
Saw acouple, not sure whose they were. I just simply responded. Sorry.
 
-PBS
 
===================================================

--- mmoserbooth@gmail.com wrote:

From: Mike Moser-Booth <mmoserbooth@gmail.com>
To: csound@lists.bath.ac.uk
Subject: [Csnd] Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Csound Beginner
Date: Thu, 04 Feb 2010 23:42:11 -0500

Dudes, did my earlier correction not make it to anyone&apos;s inbox!? Because I totally cleared this up already:

http://old.nabble.com/Re%3A-Re%3A-Re%3A-Re%3A-Re%3A-Csound-Beginner-p27456455.html

with brackets and everything. :-\

Not to sound like a jerk or anything; I mean it as an honest question and am wondering if I may have incorrectly replied. I&apos;m just surprised this di scussion kept going.

.mmb

Partev Barr Sarkissian wrote:
Sort of right. It&apos;s a sum of odd harmonics, so it would be-
 
Fundamental= full ppower or =1
2nd= 0
3rd=  1/3
4th= 0
5th= 1/5
6th= 0
7th= 1/7
8th= 0
9th= 1/9
 
 
f1 0 1024 10  1 0 1/3 0 1/5 0 1/7 0 1/9  
 
... and so on, for each term of Odd harmonics for as many as you can use. It&apos;s typically known as a Fourier Sum,
named after Jean Pierre Baptiste Fouier. Check out the book "Who Is Fourier?", it&apos;s
very enlightening about the subject.
 
-Partev
 
=========================================================================

--- mmoserbooth@gmail.com wrote:

From: Mike Moser-Booth <mmoserbooth@gmail.com>
To: csound@lists.bath.ac.uk
Subject: [Csnd] Re: Re: Re: Csound Beginner
Date: Wed, 03 Feb 2010 22:03:52 -0500

You mean odd harmonics to 1, even harmonics to 0, right? :-)

.mmb

Rory Walsh wrote:
Whoops, a square wave you said, set the strength of each odd harmonics
to 0 then.

On 3 February 2010 20:02, Rory Walsh <rorywalsh@ear.ie> wrote:
  
You can do this using GEN10 and setting the first 10 harmonics to full
strnght, i.e,

f1 0 1024 10 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

Then use an oscil to read this table.

Rory.


On 3 February 2010 20:00, edexter5 <Eric_Dexter@msn.com> wrote:
    
I tend to use other peoples instruments but I did see a power point that may
explain it to you.  (hope this isn&apos;t a homework question)

      
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Date2010-02-06 07:00
FromMike Moser-Booth
Subject[Csnd] Re: Re: Re: Csound Beginner
Hey, no problem. I was just worried that I was getting labeled as spam or something.

.mmb

Partev Barr Sarkissian wrote:
Saw acouple, not sure whose they were. I just simply responded. Sorry.
 
-PBS
 
===================================================

--- mmoserbooth@gmail.com wrote:

From: Mike Moser-Booth <mmoserbooth@gmail.com>
To: csound@lists.bath.ac.uk
Subject: [Csnd] Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Csound Beginner
Date: Thu, 04 Feb 2010 23:42:11 -0500

Dudes, did my earlier correction not make it to anyone&apos;s inbox!? Because I totally cleared this up already:

http://old.nabble.com/Re%3A-Re%3A-Re%3A-Re%3A-Re%3A-Csound-Beginner-p27456455.html

with brackets and everything. :-\

Not to sound like a jerk or anything; I mean it as an honest question and am wondering if I may have incorrectly replied. I&apos;m just surprised this discussion kept going.

.mmb

Partev Barr Sarkissian wrote:
Sort of right. It&apos;s a sum of odd harmonics, so it would be-
 
Fundamental= full ppower or =1
2nd= 0
3rd=  1/3
4th= 0
5th= 1/5
6th= 0
7th= 1/7
8th= 0
9th= 1/9
 
 
f1 0 1024 10  1 0 1/3 0 1/5 0 1/7 0 1/9  
 
... and so on, for each term of Odd harmonics for as many as you can use. It&apos;s typically known as a Fourier Sum,
named after Jean Pierre Baptiste Fouier. Check out the book "Who Is Fourier?", it&apos;s
very enlightening about the subject.
 
-Partev
 
=========================================================================

--- mmoserbooth@gmail.com wrote:

From: Mike Moser-Booth <mmoserbooth@gmail.com>
To: csound@lists.bath.ac.uk
Subject: [Csnd] Re: Re: Re: Csound Beginner
Date: Wed, 03 Feb 2010 22:03:52 -0500

You mean odd harmonics to 1, even harmonics to 0, right? :-)

.mmb

Rory Walsh wrote:
Whoops, a square wave you said, set the strength of each odd harmonics
to 0 then.

On 3 February 2010 20:02, Rory Walsh <rorywalsh@ear.ie> wrote:
  
You can do this using GEN10 and setting the first 10 harmonics to full
strnght, i.e,

f1 0 1024 10 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

Then use an oscil to read this table.

Rory.


On 3 February 2010 20:00, edexter5 <Eric_Dexter@msn.com> wrote:
    
I tend to use other peoples instruments but I did see a power point that may
explain it to you.  (hope this isn&apos;t a homework question)

      
Send bugs reports to this list.
To unsubscribe, send email sympa@lists.bath.ac.uk with body "unsubscribe csound"


 

Netscape.  Just the Net You Need.


 

Netscape.  Just the Net You Need.