MeasureTool » History » Version 12
Chris Cannam, 2013-03-05 10:54 AM
1 | 1 | Chris Cannam | h1. About the Measure tool and its limitations |
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2 | 1 | Chris Cannam | |
3 | 1 | Chris Cannam | The Sonic Visualiser Help reference "describes the Measure tool":http://www.sonicvisualiser.org/doc/reference/2.0/en/#measurements like this: |
4 | 1 | Chris Cannam | |
5 | 5 | Chris Cannam | > The measure tool enables you to obtain measurements in scale units (such as time in the X coordinate, or whatever the Y coordinate of the current layer represents) corresponding to certain pixel positions. To measure a region, just click and drag a rectangle covering it, using the left mouse button with the measure tool selected ... |
6 | 4 | Chris Cannam | > It's important to note that the measurements shown in this way are based entirely on the pixel coordinates of the measurement rectangle, not on properties of the data being displayed. |
7 | 2 | Chris Cannam | |
8 | 6 | Chris Cannam | The measure tool also has the ability to produce an automatic bounding box for a graphical feature, when double-clicked: |
9 | 2 | Chris Cannam | |
10 | 2 | Chris Cannam | > The area enclosed by the rectangle is based on the extent of similarly-coloured pixels surrounding the click position: it is entirely graphical, involving no audio analysis, and so depends on the gain and colour scheme in use in the spectrogram. |
11 | 7 | Chris Cannam | |
12 | 7 | Chris Cannam | Here's an example of what that means in terms of the practical limitations of this tool. |
13 | 7 | Chris Cannam | |
14 | 1 | Chris Cannam | !>measure.png! |
15 | 10 | Chris Cannam | |
16 | 12 | Chris Cannam | This is a recording of a singer, with vibrato. For this illustration I have switched off all of the spectrogram interpolation options in the preferences. The image shown here is a composite of three separately-highlighted measure boxes, because it isn't actually possible to highlight all three at once in SV. |