I did a little bit of work last year with chaotic functions and
numerical solutions in real-time. Maybe this is in the direciton you
were looking, but I'm sure other have done much more complete analysis
and demonstrations. *shrug*
http://www.eigenmusic.net/?p=12
-Drew
On Mon, Jan 24, 2011 at 9:01 PM, ronni montoya
Hi , i was wondering how can i have access to fft matrices in chuck?
other question , Do any body have made chaos functions in chuck? or maybe there are examples of this?
If you are interested in chaos for sound generation you should check the "non stardard" approach but this works in the time domain, basically you define waveform segments , basically you map the values comming from the chaos function into breakpoints defined as time values and amplitude in the sample level, look for it in google, i think there a lot of potencial with this approach
R.
2011/1/24 Wolfgang Gil
: Thank you Joe
On Jan 24, 2011, at 1:57 AM, Joe McMahon
wrote: I seem to recall at least a couple articles in the Computer Music Journal (back when you could still find it on the newstands - mid '90's? oops, 1988, see link below) about this. You might want to check with a local academic library to see if you could track them down.
https://blekko.com/ws/computer+music+journal+fractals points at a LOT of possibles. In particular http://www.faqs.org/faqs/fractal-faq/section-14.html should be of interest. _______________________________________________ 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
_______________________________________________ chuck-users mailing list chuck-users@lists.cs.princeton.edu https://lists.cs.princeton.edu/mailman/listinfo/chuck-users