44 lines
1.9 KiB
Text
44 lines
1.9 KiB
Text
class:: CompanderD
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summary:: Compressor, expander, limiter, gate, ducker.
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related:: Classes/Amplitude, Classes/Compander, Classes/Normalizer, Classes/Limiter
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categories:: UGens>Dynamics
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Description::
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CompanderD passes the signal directly to the control input, but
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adds a delay to the process input so that the lag in the gain clamping
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will not lag the attacks in the input sound.
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classmethods::
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method::ar
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argument::in
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The signal to be compressed / expanded / gated.
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argument::thresh
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Control signal amplitude threshold, which determines the break point between slopeBelow and slopeAbove. Usually 0..1. The control signal amplitude is calculated using RMS.
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argument::slopeBelow
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Slope of the amplitude curve below the threshold. If this slope > 1.0, the amplitude will drop off more quickly the softer the control signal gets; when the control signal is close to 0 amplitude, the output should be exactly zero -- hence, noise gating. Values < 1.0 are possible, but it means that a very low-level control signal will cause the input signal to be amplified, which would raise the noise floor.
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argument::slopeAbove
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Same thing, but above the threshold. Values < 1.0 achieve compression (louder signals are attenuated); > 1.0, you get expansion (louder signals are made even louder). For 3:1 compression, you would use a value of 1/3 here.
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argument::clampTime
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The amount of time it takes for the amplitude adjustment to kick in fully. This is usually pretty small, not much more than 10 milliseconds (the default value). I often set it as low as 2 milliseconds (0.002).
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argument::relaxTime
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The amount of time for the amplitude adjustment to be released. Usually a bit longer than clampTime; if both times are too short, you can get some (possibly unwanted) artifacts.
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argument::mul
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Output will be multiplied by this value.
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argument::add
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This value will be added to the output.
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Discussion::
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If any of this is confusing, see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Audio_level_compression
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