It is also quite similar to Sonic Visualiser, but I couldn't find a way to "stack" waveforms in order to compare them in SV. Though, I might have missed the option to do it, i.e. I'm not saying I did a deep software review before starting DFasma ...

Cheers,
G


On Fri, Mar 11, 2016 at 5:33 AM, Paul Davis <paul@linuxaudiosystems.com> wrote:
And maybe compare and contrast with sonic visualiser?

On Thu, Mar 10, 2016 at 11:39 PM, Philip Yassin <philcm@gnu.org> wrote:
I don't quite understand what it does (sounds quite magical - and looks really neat - though, could you give use quick use cases, when would who needs it?) but it made into a news item on LMP

Cheers


On 03/10/2016 09:37 PM, Gilles Degottex wrote:
Greetings,

I felt we lack a light, quick and efficient tool to compare waveforms.
DFasma is quite convenient for inspection of results of synthesis and modification tasks on voice signals.


Downloads:
https://github.com/gillesdegottex/dfasma/releases

* Shows spectrogram, amplitude spectrum, phase spectrum and group delay.
* Can play a filtered sound given a selected frequency band.
* Rectification of the spectrogram tilt (cepstral lifting).
* Can create and edit fundamental frequency (F0) files (thanks to REAPER).
* Can create and edit segmentation files.
* Can load about 25 different audio formats (thanks to libsndfile).
* Everything runs under Linux, Mac OSX  and Windows.

Have fun ! And any type of feedback is welcomed of course.

Cheers,
Gilles


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