<br><div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; padding-left: 1ex;"><br>><br>> I sympathize - what about the fftease package? I don't know anything
<br>> about it but it may have something like you described if I remember<br>> correctly. I was really screwed on understanding FFT until I looked<br>> at the VASP examples and then it made a little sense. The wonderful
<br>> thing about Pd is that you still don't always need to understand the<br>> math, just playing with trial and error works too! Which would have<br>> been fine for me except my patch sounded like poo, hence the post.
<br>></blockquote><div><br><br>FFTease for Pd is available here: <br><br><a href="http://www.sarc.qub.ac.uk/~elyon/LyonSoftware/MaxMSP/FFTease/">http://www.sarc.qub.ac.uk/~elyon/LyonSoftware/MaxMSP/FFTease/</a><br><br>
It was very much written as an "FFT for Dummies" package, or more precisely to expose the possibilities of spectral processing while hiding much of the coding pain. Open-sourcing FFTease is on my todo list; for now it is available as binaries for Mac(ppc)/Win/Linux. The documentation should get you started, but feel free to write me directly if you have any questions.
<br><br>Best,<br><br>Eric<br><br></div><br></div><br>