Am I confused about wavetable
- KVRAF
- 12615 posts since 7 Dec, 2004
Free plug-ins for Windows, MacOS and Linux. Xhip Synthesizer v8.0 and Xhip Effects Bundle v6.7.
The coder's credo: We believe our work is neither clever nor difficult; it is done because we thought it would be easy.
Work less; get more done.
The coder's credo: We believe our work is neither clever nor difficult; it is done because we thought it would be easy.
Work less; get more done.
-
- KVRist
- 30 posts since 22 Dec, 2010
Actually, that's what I figured you meant. But I still don't see it. When people made signal generators 50-60 years ago, square wave seemed like a good term then—better than "Symmetric Linear Pulse". Face it, no one is horribly confused by what is meant when someone says "square wave". Two syllables, rolls off the tongue nicely. Maybe there's a point I'm not catching from you, but I guess that' means you'll have to give another go at saying why...ENV1 wrote:That may be true today.codehead wrote:LOL—I think more people get the right idea when you say "square wave" than if you said "Symmetric Linear Pulse" (or worse—yet another TLA—"SLP").
But thats not what i was talking about.
I said that these terms should have been used from the beginning, i.e. 50-60 years ago.
Actually, that's not what pedantic means, sorry. OK, I guess you weren't joking.ENV1 wrote:Well, if 'pedantic' is another description for doing things in a logical, thought-through fashion then 'pedantic' would seem to be the way to go. It is in any case preferable to ignorant, negligent and careless, which rather often leads to chaos, misunderstanding and things that make little or no sense at all...codehead wrote:I realize that you may be joking, but if not...ever hear the word "pedantic"?
Alright, maybe you're taking "square" a bit too narrowly. A T-square isn't square. When we talk about making a corner "square", we mean a 90-degree angle. No one is horribly confused when people say this—no chaos.
Symmetric Linear Pulse is just too long to describe something so simple and basic, and no more understandable than square wave (and no more understandable—it doesn't explain the access of symmetry, so a lot of pulse trains would qualify for that description). And "SLP"...funny, but I entered a different hi-tech field 10 months ago, that uses an unbelievable number of "TLAs" (three-letter-acronyms/abbreviations). The trouble with that is a lot of them have to be guessed by context (for instance, "ETA" does not mean "estimated time of arrival" where I work). And a lot are guessed wrong (I remember in the 80's, when the boss guessed SAR as "satellite aerial reconnaissance" and felt pretty good about himself as he looked over an aerial view printout from the laser printer I helped design—nice guess, but it was "synthetic aperture radar").
I started a TLA list when I started the job—140 of 'em so far that were worth writing down.
- KVRAF
- 13684 posts since 19 Jun, 2008 from Seattle
OMG... the visual 'effect' (@ 0:13+) of the lower portion of his shirt...
Visions of "teletubbies" dance through my head.
I'm not a musician, but I've designed sounds that others use to make music. http://soundcloud.com/obsidiananvil
-
- KVRAF
- 2802 posts since 31 Aug, 2011
My actual point was that a lot of the terms established back then are, at least in my opinion, suboptimal, and that there is nothing one can do about it now.codehead wrote:Maybe there's a point I'm not catching from you, but I guess that' means you'll have to give another go at saying why...
My intention was not to start an argument about something which cannot be changed anymore anyway.
That said, you are of course entirely welcome to disagree with every single word ive said.
I have absolutely no problem accepting that not everyone shares my POVs.
(Sorry for the TLA.)
- Beware the Quoth
- 35427 posts since 4 Sep, 2001 from R'lyeh Oceanic Amusement Park and Funfair
which part of the term would you say explicitly refers to a scanning mechanism? the word 'wavetable' or the word 'synthesis'?himalaya wrote:The term Wavetable Synthesis points to those methods, to the fact that there exists a mechanism to scan/sweep/move/etc through a wavetable. All of it, part of it.
- Beware the Quoth
- 35427 posts since 4 Sep, 2001 from R'lyeh Oceanic Amusement Park and Funfair
which of the two words (ie without a modifier like 'scanning') tells us about a modulation process that involves sweeping through anything?himalaya wrote: That term seems very descriptive, I think. It tells us that using the modulation process we can synthesize new sounds by sweeping through all (or selection) of the waves contained in a wavetable.
and are you asserting now that wavetables contain more then one cycle? (c.f. 'the waves')
Well, if you look again at the Robert Bristow-Johnson paper again, you'll be reminded that there's quite a lot left. Most of it in the 'additive world', actually, eg crossfading, mixing, and erm, additive.Without the 'scanning' bit what is left? Simple playback of a single cycle wave? Then we are back in the 'subtractive world' for shaping the tone.
Not that the academic definition excludes scanning, of course. It just isnt delimted to it alone. The academic definition covers a class of related methods, rather than one specific method. If your asking what is left without scanning, read the paper again.
I mean, at the end of the day, aren't you basically saying
"method X was named Y by person Q, and thus name Y can only ever be applied to method X, and that trumps name Y being used for anything else."
More than that, you're saying "even though term Z, term W, and term X-variant-A are also used to describe method X, anything which does not do method X should not be called by name Y."
And you're also saying "even though the accepted scientific taxonomy of methods specifically uses term Y for a class of methods which includes method X (within which taxonomy it can be called term X-variant A), anything which does not do method X should not be descfibed by term Y. Use of the scientific taxonomic term is wrong."
Is that correct?
If so, do you yet feel like suggesting to the scientific community which replacement for the term 'wavetable synthesis' you'll allow them to use for the class of methods of synthesis which involve wavetables?
-
- KVRAF
- 5666 posts since 23 Mar, 2006 from pendeLondonmonium
No I'm not. I wrote that the wavetable contains 'waves' - as in 'single cycles waves' (or 'waveforms', I'll add in case you also pick on the word 'waves').whyterabbyt wrote:
and are you asserting now that wavetables contain more then one cycle? (c.f. 'the waves')
In the context of wavetable synthesis a wavetable is a collection of single cycle waveforms.
Sure there is a lot left, just not in Rapture, which is the context through out this topic. With Rapture's implementation you end up with a subtractive synth, rather than an additive.whyterabbyt wrote:
Well, if you look again at the Robert Bristow-Johnson paper again, you'll be reminded that there's quite a lot left. Most of it in the 'additive world', actually, eg crossfading, mixing, and erm, additive.
Not that the academic definition excludes scanning, of course. It just isnt delimted to it alone. The academic definition covers a class of related methods, rather than one specific method. If your asking what is left without scanning, read the paper again.
Absolutely not. I am frankly surprised at your drive to obfuscate the issue..whyterabbyt wrote:
I mean, at the end of the day, aren't you basically saying
What I have been pointing to all along is that Rapture does not exist in isolation. It hasn't just popped out of the blue. It is not the first wavetable synth. And why is that important? It's because there have been numerous wavetable synths which have established what wavetable synthesis features, and have shown all users what can be easily achieved by sweeping through a wavetable.
Now comes Rapture described as the Ultimate Wavetable synth, and so obviously people get interested. Most will want to explore what they have been exploring in older synths like the PPG, Microwaves and many others. They will want to access a wavetable(s) and easily modulate the content for those classic sounds (in the box, without learning SFZ opcodes or investing is SFZ creation programs and the like). But alas, that can't be done. In the "Ultimate Wavetable" synth? And so cue threads by users who get stumped by Rapture's wavetable implementation which perversely stands out from everything (worth its salt) that has gone before (and please don't quote some obscure Music IV B systems, as they are not relevant to this ).
At the same time I have no beef with the way Rapture has wavetables implemented, that's all fine, but the whole point is, there ought to be some kind of acknowledgement, info - for the benefit of prospective buyers - that its wavetable system differs to that established by pretty much every commercial wavetable synth out there.
It's not a matter of studying academic papers, but of customer relations and information.
I fully expect this post to be
oh just give me the opportunity!quoted
you lost me thereto
can you define it?oblivion
not in your lifetimeand
can't prove it, can you?taken
have a formula for that?apart
enjoy!
- Beware the Quoth
- 35427 posts since 4 Sep, 2001 from R'lyeh Oceanic Amusement Park and Funfair
So you're quoting wikipedia to trump RBJ's AES paper?himalaya wrote:In the context of wavetable synthesis a wavetable is a collection of single cycle waveforms.
Could you maybe stick to proving your assertions rather than repeating them? Once again, I'll ask you to explicitly state what it does not do that exempts it from the definition given by RBJ, instead of just state that it is exempted.Sure there is a lot left, just not in Rapture, which is the context through out this topic. With Rapture's implementation you end up with a subtractive synth, rather than an additive.
Interesting. All the way through this Ive been striving, without any success, to get 100% definitive statements from you which do not rely solely on 'I assert therefore the assertion is true', and you call that obfuscation?Absolutely not. I am frankly surprised at your drive to obfuscate the issue..
That's quite amusing. A bit hypocritical, given the stuff you've thrown into the debate so far, but there you go.
Noone has contradicted any of those things. None of those things contradict the assertion that it uses Wavetable Synthesis as described in the RBJ paper.What I have been pointing to all along is that Rapture does not exist in isolation. It hasn't just popped out of the blue. It is not the first wavetable synth.
Well, none of those things are, TBH.And why is that important?
No, that's not important either. Historic implementations of one subcategory of class X don't actually have any bearing on whether product Y implements a different subcategory.It's because there have been numerous wavetable synths which have established what wavetable synthesis features, and have shown all users what can be easily achieved by sweeping through a wavetable.
Wait, are you moving the goalpsost from whether is is wavetable synthesis to whether its the 'ultimate' in wavetable synthesis?Now comes Rapture described as the Ultimate Wavetable synth, and so obviously people get interested.
That's not what Ive been discussing. And neither have you up till now.
Can you provide references to support this assertion as to what 'most' people will want to do with it? Or do we just accept it because you're saying it?Most will want to explore what they have been exploring in older synths like the PPG, Microwaves and many others. They will want to access a wavetable(s) and easily modulate the content for those classic sounds (in the box, without learning SFZ opcodes or investing is SFZ creation programs and the like).
In fact since it is 5 years old, wont 'most' of them have heard that it doesnt do wavesequencing by now anyway?
Does it really stand out from everything else? Hmmm, z3ta+ relies on wavetables, the Prophet VS relied on wavetables, The digital oscillators on the Evolver use wavetables. The WMD GWS and Piston Honda use wavetables. What specifically 'perversely stands out' in rapture?And so cue threads by users who get stumped by Rapture's wavetable implementation which perversely stands out from everything (worth its salt) that has gone before (and please don't quote some obscure Music IV B systems, as they are not relevant to this ).
You keep asserting that Rapture is exempt, but you've steadfastly refused to specify exactly how, in terms of its actual synthesis system. Ive asked several times, and you keep avoiding doing so.
And no, obfuscating things by saying 'numerous synths used to do X' doesnt actually work there.
Really? Because it actually looks more like you've been assertingAt the same time I have no beef with the way Rapture has wavetables implemented, that's all fine, but the whole point is, there ought to be some kind of acknowledgement, info - for the benefit of prospective buyers - that its wavetable system differs to that established by pretty much every commercial wavetable synth out there.
"its wavetable system differs to that established by pretty much every commercial scanned-wavetable synth out there"
instead.
It's not a matter of studying academic papers, but of customer relations and information.
And youre now asserting that this is a significant issue with a major impact on a company's customer relations are you?
Would you like to bring us up to speed with the numbers of their customers who have been affected by this?
-
- KVRAF
- 5666 posts since 23 Mar, 2006 from pendeLondonmonium
Yes, please do "wait" and read the first post on page 4!Wait, are you moving the goalpsost from whether is is wavetable synthesis to whether its the 'ultimate' in wavetable synthesis?
That's not what Ive been discussing. And neither have you up till now.
end of.
- KVRAF
- 19783 posts since 16 Sep, 2001 from Las Vegas,USA
You've got to be kidding.....10 pages of argument on the meaning of "Wavetable"? Seriously...get...a...life.... 
None are so hopelessly enslaved as those who falsely believe they are free. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
-
- KVRAF
- 5666 posts since 23 Mar, 2006 from pendeLondonmonium
I'm baby sitting just now. My daughter listens to toddler songs on Youtube while sat on my lap, and so I can't do much else (it seems!). Although typing with one hand is tricky. 
- KVRAF
- 19783 posts since 16 Sep, 2001 from Las Vegas,USA
Turn off the computer and pay all your attention to your daughter....she won't be a toddler for long..... 
None are so hopelessly enslaved as those who falsely believe they are free. Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
- Beware the Quoth
- 35427 posts since 4 Sep, 2001 from R'lyeh Oceanic Amusement Park and Funfair
So you're saying that something that you mentioned (once?) as 'bemusing and confusing' has redefined the entirety of everything in your argument since that point?himalaya wrote:Yes, please do "wait" and read the first post on page 4!Wait, are you moving the goalpsost from whether is is wavetable synthesis to whether its the 'ultimate' in wavetable synthesis?
That's not what Ive been discussing. And neither have you up till now.
without you actually saying "the primary thing Im specifically addressing is whether its 'ultimate' even though Ive gone on and on without mentioning the modifier ever again.
oh wait, you also asserted that if something is 'ultimate' it has to do one particular thing you assert it has to do. with no rationale for that assertion.
interesting.
any particular reason you witheld that qualifier for another 6 pages?
Sure. Rapture does wavetable synthesis, it just isnt the ultimate wavetable synthesiser. Im happy to agree with that.end of.
-
- KVRAF
- 5666 posts since 23 Mar, 2006 from pendeLondonmonium
You're absolutely right, but she needs her daily dose of the 'Rig a Jig Jig' - Mother Goose Club Nursery Rhymes. I bop to it too, now.Teksonik wrote:Turn off the computer and pay all your attention to your daughter....she won't be a toddler for long.....
