view base/LogRange.h @ 1247:8f076d02569a piper

Make SVDEBUG always write to a log file -- formerly this was disabled in NDEBUG builds. I think there's little use to that, it just means that we keep adding more cerr debug output because we aren't getting the log we need. And SVDEBUG logging is not usually used in tight loops, I don't think the performance overhead is too serious. Also update the About box.
author Chris Cannam
date Thu, 03 Nov 2016 14:57:00 +0000
parents 31f01931b781
children 667e369cfeab
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/* -*- c-basic-offset: 4 indent-tabs-mode: nil -*-  vi:set ts=8 sts=4 sw=4: */

/*
    Sonic Visualiser
    An audio file viewer and annotation editor.
    Centre for Digital Music, Queen Mary, University of London.
    This file copyright 2006 Chris Cannam.
    
    This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
    modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as
    published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the
    License, or (at your option) any later version.  See the file
    COPYING included with this distribution for more information.
*/

#ifndef _LOG_RANGE_H_
#define _LOG_RANGE_H_

#include <vector>
#include "Debug.h"

class LogRange
{
public:
    /**
     * Map a linear range onto a logarithmic range.  min and max are
     * passed as the extents of the linear range and returned as the
     * extents of the logarithmic range.  thresh is the minimum value
     * for the log range, to be used if the linear range spans zero.
     */
    static void mapRange(double &min, double &max, double thresh = -10);

    /**
     * Map a value onto a logarithmic range.  This just means taking
     * the base-10 log of the absolute value, or using the threshold
     * value if the absolute value is zero.
     */
    static double map(double value, double thresh = -10);

    /**
     * Map a value from the logarithmic range back again.  This just
     * means taking the value'th power of ten.
     */
    static double unmap(double value);

    /**
     * Estimate whether a set of values would be more properly shown
     * using a logarithmic than a linear scale.  This is only ever
     * going to be a rough guess.
     */
    static bool useLogScale(std::vector<double> values);

};

#endif