LiCK has implementations of all the easing interpolations as fuction classes, test here

https://github.com/heuermh/lick/blob/master/InterpolationTest.ck

   michael


On Jul 13, 2012, at 2:18 PM, Lars Ullrich <mail@larsullrich.de> wrote:

what about:


float lineInterpol(float startValue, float endValue, float percent) {
        if (startValue == endValue) return startValue;
        return ((1 - percent) * startValue) + (percent * endValue);
}


Am 13.07.2012 um 22:21 schrieb George Locke:

I was worried I'd end up with s/t like Jordan's solution; can't try Kassen's suggestion till i get home, but it does look a lot cleaner.

@Jordan If you want a pitch envelope, you can do s/t like this:

Envelope e => Gain g => SinOsc s => dac;
Step s=> g;
0 => s.sync; // binds s.freq to input from g

100 => float minFreq;
500 => float maxFreq;
minFreq => s.next;
(maxFreq-minFreq) => e.gain; // noteOn() no longer limited to 0-1 ;)  
e.noteOn(); 


I learned how to do this last night for a percussion patch i'm working on.  


On Fri, Jul 13, 2012 at 3:38 PM, Kassen <signal.automatique@gmail.com> wrote:
With the way I illustrated you should be able to write arbitrarily
large or small values to either .value() or .target().

It is only when using noteOn() and noteOff() (or whatever they were
called) that it is forced in the 0-1 range, I believe.

Yours,
Kas.
_______________________________________________
chuck-users mailing list
chuck-users@lists.cs.princeton.edu
https://lists.cs.princeton.edu/mailman/listinfo/chuck-users

_______________________________________________
chuck-users mailing list
chuck-users@lists.cs.princeton.edu
https://lists.cs.princeton.edu/mailman/listinfo/chuck-users

------------------------------------------------
Audio Engineer / Developer

Lars Ullrich
F:   00 49/  (0) 30 569 70 435
H:  00 49/   0172 477 09 77

http://www.larsullrich.de

_______________________________________________
chuck-users mailing list
chuck-users@lists.cs.princeton.edu
https://lists.cs.princeton.edu/mailman/listinfo/chuck-users