@lvbandmore , the four numbers I mean are the lengths of the four vertical lines in your presentation of the result of your analysis. There is a pair above and a pair below, and in each pair, a line extending up from a horizontal centerline and a line extending down. Maybe you are showing loudness in the two channels of the stereo signal, with a division of the frequency spectrum into two bands? Or a division into the first and last half of the given time slice?
@b43xoit I think you mean 4 horizontal lines? The top pair is the left channel and the bottom is the right channel. Actually I only really needed to show 1 channel, but I like the way it looks with both channels (that's just a personal taste choice). The distance from the center of each of the 2 channels is the wave form, usually an expression of the loudness/dynamics. Vertical lines corresponds to the structural divisions of the piece described in the description. Hope that helps.
Je comprend pas le "analysis" mais la musique est divine!
mtoussieh 3 months ago
I loooooooooooooooooooove it. Thank you(:
netoxxo 3 months ago
OK, so for every time slice you're analyzing, you give us four numbers, which all correlate very closely to each other. What do they measure?
b43xoit 4 months ago
@b43xoit If you click on the number (which is a time) it will take you to the exact second in the video that that movement starts
lvbandmore 4 months ago
@lvbandmore , the four numbers I mean are the lengths of the four vertical lines in your presentation of the result of your analysis. There is a pair above and a pair below, and in each pair, a line extending up from a horizontal centerline and a line extending down. Maybe you are showing loudness in the two channels of the stereo signal, with a division of the frequency spectrum into two bands? Or a division into the first and last half of the given time slice?
b43xoit 4 months ago
@b43xoit I think you mean 4 horizontal lines? The top pair is the left channel and the bottom is the right channel. Actually I only really needed to show 1 channel, but I like the way it looks with both channels (that's just a personal taste choice). The distance from the center of each of the 2 channels is the wave form, usually an expression of the loudness/dynamics. Vertical lines corresponds to the structural divisions of the piece described in the description. Hope that helps.
lvbandmore 4 months ago