Quoting Lisi Reisz (lisi.re...@gmail.com): > On Monday 29 June 2015 02:28:20 Richard Owlett wrote: > > Dan Hitt wrote: > > > Hi, > > > > > > Could somebody please point me to a sound waveform viewer? > > > > > > I'm aware of audacity, which is of course a very fine piece of > > > software. But its function is more to edit than just to view. So, > > > e.g., if you open a sound file, then it wants to create a project, and > > > when you want to exit you have to tell it not to save the project that > > > it created. > > > > > > I would like to just have something that shows the waveform. > > > > > > Ideally it would do other tasks connected with viewing, such as being > > > able to zoom to the sample level, give actual data readouts [sample > > > value, time, etc], and play nice with other software. So it would be > > > nice, e.g., if you could pop it open at the command line and maybe > > > even have it scroll to some interesting point. (It would also be nice > > > if it could play the wave form, but if it can't that's no deal > > > breaker.) > > > > > > My vague recollection is that there used to be more than a dozen such > > > viewers, but i can't seem to track any down now. > > > > > > TIA for any leads! > > > > > > dan > > > > Unlikely what you were recalling but I would recommend investigating > > scilab, scioslab, and gnuplot > > > > They are EXPLICITLY tools rather than SOLUTIONS. > > And there are the answer to the question how? He explicitly wanted a SOUND > waveform viewer, with playing the sound a bonus. I know Maths and sound are > linked, but this seems going a bit far.
Well, it's in the list at https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Waveform_Viewers-Plotting_Large_Analog_Data which might be worth perusing (third hit when googling interactive waveform plotting ) Cheers, David. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/20150630204216.GA27376@alum