A question that i've been meaning to ask for some time.
In the configure options is: --max-pitch-value (octaves) then a short paragraph about possible memory saving with a smaller value than the default 4.
Can i ask what exactly this option does, and how does the value pertain to something like a large sample library, where there's generally a sample for each semitone.
Does this value dictate the possible available "stretch" of a single sample in pitch?
Does it dictate the maximum octave range in pitch that LS will process in an instance?
Or other?
Alex.
max pitch value (octaves)
Re: max pitch value (octaves)
It defines how many octaves one particular sample can be transposed (or as you say it "stretched") from its original tone pitch. This is especially relevant for up-pitching a sample. The sampler needs to know a global all-time maximum value here, so the required audio processing buffers can be allocated large enough on startup to achieve such high maximum pitches of a sample in one audio period / fragment.
Re: max pitch value (octaves)
Thanks, that will help.
I don't have anything i'm using in LS that is stretched by more than 5 semitones (nearly all is ST, or Tone based), so i'll try this with 1 octave, and see if something falls over.
Alex.
I don't have anything i'm using in LS that is stretched by more than 5 semitones (nearly all is ST, or Tone based), so i'll try this with 1 octave, and see if something falls over.
Alex.
Re: max pitch value (octaves)
Cuse, starts, runs, and reducing the max-pitch to 1 octave seems to have saved me a bit of RAM.
Thanks for the heads up.
Alex.
Thanks for the heads up.
Alex.