two ways to do it that I know of: put it on its own line with this: <<< T >>> or just divide by one sample, because that's the base unit of duration: T / 1::samp will yield the number of samples in the duration. That's how it's normally printed with <<< T >>> anyway. Getting the human time like having it say 1.5s would mean you'd have to factor in the current sampling rate, not sure if that's accessible from ChucK code itself. -jordan On Wednesday, December 12, 2012 at 9:44 PM, Aurélien Bondis wrote:
Hi,
I don't know for sure if this applies to your version but in the doc it says chout and stdout have been disabled
http://chuck.cs.princeton.edu/doc/language/overview.html "For the time being, stdout and chout have been temporarily disabled for the present release. In their place we have provided a debug print"
Aurélien
On Thu, 13 Dec 2012, stephane.poirier@oifii.org (mailto:stephane.poirier@oifii.org) wrote:
Hi All,
Here below are 3 lines of code in chuck. How could I modify it to output the value of T in the chout?
// this synchronizes to period 0.75::second => dur T; T - (now % T) => now; // output to console on stdout chout <= 1 <= " foo " <= 5.5 <= IO.newline();
Regards,
Stephane
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