annotate deploy/linux/deb-skeleton/DEBIAN/control @ 2109:8c356423942c

Retain consistent min freq (rather than min bin no) when changing fft parameters in spectrum; scale ffts by window size rather than fft size in case of oversampling, to avoid fading out because of scale factor including zero padding
author Chris Cannam
date Thu, 15 Nov 2018 15:08:30 +0000
parents d191ba54592e
children
rev   line source
Chris@861 1 Package: sonic-visualiser
Chris@861 2 Priority: optional
Chris@861 3 Maintainer: Chris Cannam <cannam@all-day-breakfast.com>
Chris@861 4 Architecture: amd64
Chris@861 5 Version: 2.4cc-1
Chris@861 6 Installed-Size: 6056
Chris@861 7 Section: contrib/sound
Chris@861 8 Depends: libqt5core5a, libsndfile1, libsamplerate0, libfftw3-3, libbz2-1.0, libpulse0, libmad0, libid3tag0, liboggz2, libfishsound1, libasound2, liblo7, liblrdf0, libsord-0-0, libserd-0-0, vamp-plugin-sdk, librubberband2, libc6
Chris@861 9 Description: View and analyse the contents of music audio files
Chris@861 10 Sonic Visualiser is an application for viewing and analysing the contents
Chris@861 11 of music audio files. It was developed at the Centre for Digital Music at
Chris@861 12 Queen Mary, University of London. Our aim is for it to be the first program
Chris@861 13 you reach for when want to study a musical recording rather than simply
Chris@861 14 listen to it.
Chris@861 15 We hope Sonic Visualiser will be of particular interest to musicologists,
Chris@861 16 archivists, signal-processing researchers and anyone else looking for a
Chris@861 17 friendly way to take a look at what lies inside the audio file.