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#X text 12 105 LIBRARY internal;
#X text 12 145 WEBSITE http://crca.ucsd.edu/~msp/;
#X text 12 25 LICENSE SIBSD;
#X text 12 125 AUTHOR Miller Puckette;
#X text 12 185 HELP_PATCH_AUTHORS Dave Sabine \, May 5 \, 2003 . Jonathan
Wilkes revised the patch to conform to the PDDP template for Pd version
0.42.;
#X text 12 5 KEYWORDS signal conversion;
#X text 12 45 DESCRIPTION: audio input;
#X text 12 65 INLET_0;
#X text 12 85 OUTLET_N signal;
#X text 12 165 RELEASE_DATE 1997;
#X restore 501 597 pd META;
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#X obj 62 43 switch~;
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#X text 7 2 [adc~] Related Objects;
#X text 114 43 [block~];
#X text 19 66 (Note: having a [block~] and a [switch~] in the same
window causes an error \, which is why [block~] is shown above as a
comment.);
#X text 19 118 Externals;
#X obj 173 43 throw~;
#X obj 225 43 catch~;
#X obj 277 43 send~;
#X obj 321 43 receive~;
#X obj 19 142 pddp/helplink pdogg/oggcast~;
#X obj 19 162 pddp/helplink unauthorized/mp3cast~;
#X text 18 183 [shoutcast~] (What library is this object in?);
#X restore 102 597 pd Related_objects;
#X obj 490 3 adc~;
#X obj 466 20 pddp/pddplink http://wiki.puredata.info/en/adc~ -text
pdpedia: adc~;
#X text 99 338 signal;
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#X obj 86 59 adc~;
#X obj 86 191 adc~ 5;
#X text 144 192 a mono signal from channel 5;
#X obj 86 222 adc~ 1 3 8 6 11 15 19 22 23 24 36;
#X text 360 223 11 channels of audio;
#X obj 86 252 adc~ 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8;
#X text 257 253 all channels on an 8-channel device;
#X text 130 59 default stereo signals: same as:;
#X obj 332 60 adc~ 1 2;
#X text 168 438 - the object defaults to 2 incoming audio channels
(usually a left and right stereo pair). Any number of arguments (integers)
can be used to define one or multiple input channels - each integer
corresponds to an input channel on your audio hardware.;
#X text 80 438 n) float;
#X text 169 338 - the number of outlets corresponds with the number
of arguments - each outlet represents an input channel on your audio
hardware which corresponds to the argument you provide. If no arguments
are provided \, then there are two outlets which represent audio channels
1 and 2 on your computers sound card.;
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#X obj 150 104 tgl 15 0 empty empty empty 17 7 0 10 -262144 -1 -1 0
1;
#X text 180 104 <- Click to get amplitude of channel 1;
#X text 130 151 RMS amplitude (dB);
#X text 169 300 - the inlet to [adc~] is not used.;
#X text 99 300 (inactive);
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#N canvas 45 94 428 471 Multi-channel_audio 0;
#X text 19 38 All sound cards are capable of at least two channels
of audio. Pd supports these two channels by default and uses your system's
generic audio drivers to communicate with your hardware. However \,
for faster input/output and for more than two channels of audio \,
PD incorporates the use of "PortAudio" which uses ASIO drivers to communicate
with your hardware. So \, to instruct Pd to use more than two channels
of audio \, your command line should read like below:;
#X text 80 145 c:/pd/bin/pd.exe -pa -inchannels 8 -outchannels 8;
#X text 19 174 The "-pa" switch means "PortAudio". This switch is new
as of Pd version 0.37 TEST 4 and replaces the old "-asio" switch.;
#X text 19 234 The "-inchannels" and "-outchannels" switches can be
summarized by using "-channels 8" because currently PortAudio requires
that the number of incoming and outgoing channels must be equal. This
may change in the Pd's future...;
#X text 19 314 To further optimize Pd's usage of your audio hardware
\, you can explore the following:;
#X text 29 355 - audiobuf;
#X text 30 373 - blocksize;
#X text 29 389 - audioindev;
#X text 29 407 - audiooutdev;
#X text 25 433 With the right hardware \, Pd can manage audio input
and output with lower than 10 milliseconds of latency.;
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#X text 7 2 [dac~] Multi-channel Audio;
#X restore 102 542 pd Multi-channel_audio;
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#X text 19 37 [adc~] and [dac~] always operate at the sample rate that
is specified in Pd's command line. By default \, the sample rate is
44100 hz. But Pd operates any sample rate supported by standard audio
hardware. Sample rates cannot be changed at run-time in Pd \, but must
be stated in the command line when Pd is instantiated. As well \, two
or more instances of Pd running simoultaneously can each be using different
sample rates! Having said that \, Pd can easily upsample or downsample
by using the [block~] object. Here are some example of the common sample
rates:;
#X text 19 191 c:/pd/bin/pd.exe -r 11025;
#X text 19 221 c:/pd/bin/pd.exe -r 22050;
#X text 19 281 c:/pd/bin/pd.exe -r 88200;
#X text 19 176 c:/pd/bin/pd.exe -r 8000;
#X text 19 206 c:/pd/bin/pd.exe -r 16000;
#X text 19 236 c:/pd/bin/pd.exe -r 32000;
#X text 19 251 c:/pd/bin/pd.exe -r 44100 CD Quality;
#X text 19 266 c:/pd/bin/pd.exe -r 48000 DAT Quality;
#X text 19 311 c:/pd/bin/pd.exe -r 192000 DVD-Audio Quality;
#X text 19 296 c:/pd/bin/pd.exe -r 96000 DVD-Video/Audio Quality;
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#X text 7 2 [dac~] Sample Rate;
#X restore 102 517 pd sample_rate;
#N canvas 60 473 428 117 defeating_audio_computation 0;
#X text 19 37 There may be cases when you do not want Pd to send or
receive audio signal with your soundcard. You can manually disable
the [dac~] and [adc~] objects separately using the "-nodac" and "-noadc"
switch \, or disable both using the "-nosound" switch.;
#X obj 1 1 cnv 15 425 20 empty \$0-pddp.cnv.subheading empty 3 12 0
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#X text 7 2 [dac~] -nodac and -noadc;
#X restore 102 567 pd defeating_audio_computation;
#X text 12 23 audio input;
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