To be honest, I've not used your Spektrumanalysator I think when I was first looking at native analysers, it either wasn't around or I wasn't aware of it at that time. I'll download it now and have a playsadko4u wrote:Okay.Quirq wrote:Sorry for the confusion, what I meant was that "musical" values aren't helpful. Having things in nice round base 10 numbers (as your analyser currently does) is what I need for my simple brain
Did you try to rotate 'Reactivity' knob in LSP Spektrumanalysator?Quirq wrote:a slower response time as well, so that it can be smoothed a bit in time as well as in the frequency domain.
Did you try the 'Envelope' combo in LSP Spektrumanalysator? 3dB/oct (in terms of power) or 6dB/oct (in terms of amplitude) is actually the Pink noise envelope.Quirq wrote: I think as well it would be helpful to be able to control the slope, or at least have it fixed at 3.0 dB/octave, which seems to be fairly normal.
It also makes things more CPU time to render. I can try to add it but do not guarantee that it will render quickly.Quirq wrote: Also, the option to have the area under the spectrum filled in (probably less dense than the colour for the curve itself) might be helpful, though this is probably not terribly important, I just think it makes things a little easier to read.
Edited to add: I've downloaded your plugins and had a quick look at the Spectrum Analyser and it looks good. My main comment is that the actual graph is quite small considering the overall size of the plugin. I realise the other versions have more controls to fit in a limited space, but on the mono (which I managed to open once on the Master bus but now I can't, it crashes Ardour every time) and stereo versions the controls seem to take up a lot of room at the expense of the spectrum itself.