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<div class="moz-cite-prefix">Am 25.03.20 um 02:26 schrieb Fernando
Lopez-Lezcano:<br>
</div>
<blockquote type="cite"
cite="mid:33d9e82a-aea5-c8f2-8c74-ff75b704f6fa@ccrma.stanford.edu"><br>
Weird, in my machine this is what I see (ambdec 0.5.1):
<br>
<br>
$ jack_lsp|grep ambdec
<br>
ambdec:in.0w
<br>
ambdec:in.1y
<br>
ambdec:in.1z
<br>
ambdec:in.1x
<br>
ambdec:in.2v
<br>
ambdec:in.2t
<br>
ambdec:in.2r
<br>
ambdec:in.2s
<br>
ambdec:in.2u
<br>
ambdec:in.3q
<br>
ambdec:in.3o
<br>
ambdec:in.3m
<br>
ambdec:in.3k
<br>
ambdec:in.3l
<br>
ambdec:in.3n
<br>
ambdec:in.3p
<br>
ambdec:test
<br>
</blockquote>
<p>Yeah! That's the table I was looking for!</p>
<p>The "Using Ardour with Ambisonics"-page decodes the "mono
panners" outputs that way:</p>
<p>"Connect Ardour's master out as follows: </p>
<ul>
<li>out1 -> ambdec:in0_w </li>
<li>out2 -> ambdec:in0_x </li>
<li>out3 -> ambdec:in0_y"</li>
</ul>
<blockquote type="cite"
cite="mid:33d9e82a-aea5-c8f2-8c74-ff75b704f6fa@ccrma.stanford.edu">
<br>
<br>
<blockquote type="cite">
<blockquote type="cite">As far as I can see, that's OK. Connect
your four outputs to the first
<br>
four inputs of ambdec.
<br>
</blockquote>
<br>
Yeah, I've tried that. Master 1,2,3,4 to ambdec 0,1,2,3 via
"catia".
<br>
</blockquote>
</blockquote>
So, if I can believe this data, I have connected "w" correctly, but
made "x" to "y", "y" to "z" and "z" to "x".<br>
I'm going to check that later…<br>
<p>Many thanks!</p>
<p>And Greets!<br>
Mitsch<br>
</p>
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