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From: | Anton Runov |
Subject: | Re: Octaudio - audio editor with embedded GNU Octave |
Date: | Fri, 05 Jun 2015 18:04:23 +0300 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:24.0) Gecko/20100101 Icedove/24.8.1 |
On 2015-06-05 12:28, Juan Pablo Carbajal wrote:
On Fri, Jun 5, 2015 at 11:04 AM, Anton Runov <address@hidden> wrote:On 2015-06-05 02:52, Jordi GutiƩrrez Hermoso wrote:On Thu, 2015-06-04 at 13:51 +0300, Anton Runov wrote:You can take a look at Octaudio on GitHub https://github.com/antonrunov/octaudio. I would appreciate any comments or suggestions.I haven't tried to run it yet, but it looks like a very good idea. Perhaps you'd like to mention it somewhere in the Octave wiki, with screenshots and the like? For example, something like this? http://wiki.octave.org/Fem-fenicsYes, it's a a good idea, thanks.Did you use the new audio functions to make this?No, I use portaudio library for audio playback and recording. Anton _______________________________________________ Help-octave mailing list address@hidden https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-octavehave you checked lfat already?
Yes, and ltfat uses portaudio too. But the audio subsystem in octaudio is completely independent from octave, you can control audio operations even when the script is running. On the other hand, ltfat blockproc introduces some useful functionality that octaudio miss. Ideally, it must work within octaudio, but it seems that there are some problems. I'll try to fix it.
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