> they are. I'm -0 on the spectrogram, having personally spent time > trying to use a naive spectrogram as a power spectrum estimator. I > only spent enough time on that task > to come to the understanding that it wasn't as simple as it seemed > it should be.
it is easy, example Matlab code (maybe works in Octave or Scilab) only "calc the spectrogram" should be implemented in commons.apache.org ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ clear; clc; % read sound [sound fs nbits] = wavread('test.wav'); sound = sound(:,1); % sonagram parameters fftsize = 8192; overlap = 15/16; window = hann(fftsize); stepsize = floor(fftsize - (fftsize * overlap)); % initialise memory sona = zeros(fftsize/2+1, floor((length(sound)-round(overlap*fftsize))/stepsize)); % calc the spectrogram index = 1; for pos=1:stepsize:length(sound)-fftsize, spectrum = fft(window .* sound(pos:pos + fftsize - 1)); sona(:, index) = spectrum(1:fftsize/2+1); index = index + 1; end; % show graphic [row column] = size(sona); t = 1:column; f = 1:row; surf(t,f,10*log10(abs(sona)),'EdgeColor','none'); axis xy; axis tight; colormap(Jet); view(0,90); ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ > I would prefer that the package provide a function that "does what most > people think of when > thinking about a spectrogram" rather than the naive spectrogram. it does exactly the same that Audacity, Wavelab, Raven etc. does greetings Carsten --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]