11-27-2006 06:18 PM
11-28-2006 11:33 AM
11-28-2006 11:56 AM
11-28-2006 01:01 PM
11-28-2006 02:31 PM
Eric,
Thank you for your reply. I am sorry though that I forgot to mention that I use LabVIEW 7.1, not 8.2. Since I cannot use the VIs you attached, could you:
See if you can save them to LabVIEW 7.1
Illustrate the basic principle behind your idea.
I would greatly appreciate further help in this!
7J1L1M
12-02-2006 10:35 AM
Hay again,
Just wanted to see if my email got through. Please check my last reply, as I am getting desperate with my sound mixing. The best I can do makes it sound like aliens!
7J1L1M
12-04-2006 09:46 AM
Hello,
I saved the VIs back to
Regards,
Chetan K
Application Engineering
National Instruments
12-04-2006 10:57 AM
Thank you for your reply.
I'm afraid the first VI gives me the same results I had (alien sounding), and while the second one can play two sounds at the same time, what I really need is to be able to combine them into one wave. Like what Microsoft Sound Recorder does. In its menu, it has an option where you can mix another sound onto it. It does not play two files at the same time, but actually puts them together. That is why I can't use a live mixer, because I need to combine the actual waves into one actual file, so that you could take two wave files and combine them into one, but it would not sound like aliens . Do you know the method or math for doing this?
7J1L1M
12-04-2006 11:09 AM
What is the sampling rate of your sound card? If you aren't oversampling by quite a bit, you might be getting a lot of aliasing.
Check out: www.earlevel.com. It's one of the best sites on general digital audio there is. (Because the author is my brother-in-law!)
eric