You can get more inofrmation on the expr object at http://www.crca.ucsd.edu/~yadegari/expr.html ----------- New in Version 0.3 -Full function functionality ------------ The object "expr" is used for expression evaluaion of control data. Expr~ and fexpr~ are extentions to the expr object to work with vectors. The expr~ object is designed to efficiently combine signal and control stream processing by vector operations on the basis of the block size of the environment. fexpr~ object provides a flexible mechanism for building FIR and IIR filters by evaluating expressions on a sample by sample basis and providing access to prior samples of the input and output audio streams. When fractional offset is used, fexpr~ uses linear interpolation to determine the value of the indexed sample. fexpr~ evaluates the expression for every single sample and at every evaluation previous samples (limited by the audio vector size) can be accessed. $x is used to denote a singnal input whose samples we would like to access. The syntax is $x followed by the inlet number and indexed by brackets, for example $x1[-1] specifies the previous sample of the first inlet. Therefore, if we are to build a simple filter which replaces every sample by the average of that sample and its previous one, we would use "fexpr~ ($x1[0]+$x1[-1])/2 ". For ease of when the brackets are omitted, the current sample is implied, so we can right the previous filter expression as follows: " fexpr~ ($x1+$x1[-1])/2". To build IIR filters $y is used to access the previous samples of the output stream. The three objects expr, expr~, and fexpr~ are implemented in the same object so the files expr~.pd_linux and fexpr~.pd_linux are links to expr.pd_linux This release has been compiled and tested on Linux 6.0. -------- Here are some syntax information: (refer to help-expr.pd for examples) Syntyax: The syntax is very close to how expression are written in C. Variables are specified as follows where the '#' stands for the inlet number: $i#: integer input variable $f#: float input variable $s#: symbol input variable Used for expr~ only: $v#: signal (vector) input (vector by vector evaluation) Used for fexpr~ only: $x#[n]: the sample from inlet # indexed by n, where n has to satisfy 0 => n >= -vector size, ($x# is a shorthand for $x#[0], specifying the current sample) $y[n]: the output value indexed by n, where n has to satisfy 0 > n >= -vector size, I'll appreciate hearing about bugs, comments, suggestions, ... Shahrokh Yadegari (sdy@ucsd.edu) 1/29/02