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Logarithmic Frequency Sweep
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Logarithmic Frequency Sweep
Hi,
Some time ago I did a linear frequency sweep in Synthmaker. I'm attaching the FSM file.
I now have a necessity for a logarithmic frequency sweep instead. Does anyone have any ideas how this might be accomplished?
Some time ago I did a linear frequency sweep in Synthmaker. I'm attaching the FSM file.
I now have a necessity for a logarithmic frequency sweep instead. Does anyone have any ideas how this might be accomplished?
- Attachments
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- Linear Frequency Sweep.fsm
- (1.61 KiB) Downloaded 1497 times
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SBMastering - Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Jun 12, 2012 11:47 pm
Re: Logarithmic Frequency Sweep
A simple power function should get you a nice log sweep, for example...
freq = base_freq * (2 ^ time)
...would rise by one octave from the base_freq each time 'time'; increases by one. In Ruby, the power operator is '**' not '^', so it would be... freq = base_freq * (2 ** time)
freq = base_freq * (2 ^ time)
...would rise by one octave from the base_freq each time 'time'; increases by one. In Ruby, the power operator is '**' not '^', so it would be... freq = base_freq * (2 ** time)
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trogluddite - Posts: 1730
- Joined: Fri Oct 22, 2010 12:46 am
- Location: Yorkshire, UK
Re: Logarithmic Frequency Sweep
I couldn't get the power operator to work in the regular code window with "^". It just turns everything into black text. I have looked all over. I'd hope to avoid doing it in Ruby because I haven't been working in Ruby much yet and this just needs this one little tweak!
I'm posting a screenshot of the sweep. Also, please check out my uploaded example on my previous post.
BTW, Trog, I am going to PM you about something unrelated.
I'm posting a screenshot of the sweep. Also, please check out my uploaded example on my previous post.
BTW, Trog, I am going to PM you about something unrelated.
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SBMastering - Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Jun 12, 2012 11:47 pm
Re: Logarithmic Frequency Sweep
use pow(e,n) for ^
- Tronic
- Posts: 539
- Joined: Wed Dec 21, 2011 12:59 pm
Re: Logarithmic Frequency Sweep
Ok, I got it working with pow and increasing logarithmically. Now I'm working on trying to figure out how to get it to decrease logarithmically after it reaches it's highest point.
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SBMastering - Posts: 17
- Joined: Tue Jun 12, 2012 11:47 pm
Re: Logarithmic Frequency Sweep
?
What makes the "movement" logarithmic - is the signal scaling itself, not direction you go. It works like this. If you rescale your values into (0-1) range, and apply lin to log transformation, then what will change is the curve between 0 and 1, but the range remains the same (then you may rescale it back into whatever you wish). By curve I mean corresponding y values to x values. In linear case y=x (or y=nx, depending on initial scaling). In other cases - all depends on what you used.
What makes the "movement" logarithmic - is the signal scaling itself, not direction you go. It works like this. If you rescale your values into (0-1) range, and apply lin to log transformation, then what will change is the curve between 0 and 1, but the range remains the same (then you may rescale it back into whatever you wish). By curve I mean corresponding y values to x values. In linear case y=x (or y=nx, depending on initial scaling). In other cases - all depends on what you used.
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- tester
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