X-Git-Url: https://git.sesse.net/?p=nageru-docs;a=blobdiff_plain;f=audio.rst;h=e17a2acd2bb5807a3602e9d63e77414f86b9bbfa;hp=1266397466f3127f9ccc05471697fccaab70bac0;hb=0a6bb4813e2238a4a5a2867db9de01f0aa798953;hpb=4d5be6764bb14202533bc359af916c38987e9d2e diff --git a/audio.rst b/audio.rst index 1266397..e17a2ac 100644 --- a/audio.rst +++ b/audio.rst @@ -319,7 +319,7 @@ a skilled audio engineer will know how to adjust these to each speaker's antics—some speak at a pretty even volume and thus can get a bit of headroom, while some are much more variable and need tighter settings. -Finally (or, well, first), there's the EQ section. The **lo-cut** is again +Nearly at the top (and nearly first in the chain), there's the EQ section. The **lo-cut** is again well-known from the simple audio mode (the filter is separate for each bus, the cutoff **frequency** is the same across all buses), but there's now also a simple **three-band EQ** per bus. Simply ask the speaker @@ -329,6 +329,21 @@ and if you have a reasonable ear, you can use the EQ to your advantage to make them sound a little more even on the stream. Either that, or just put it in neutral, and the entire EQ code will be bypassed. +Finally (or, well, first), since 1.7.3, there's the **stereo width** knob. +At the default, 100%, it makes no change to the signal, but if you turn it +to 0% (at the middle), the signal becomes perfect mono. Between these two, +there's a range where the channels leak partially over into each other. +This can be useful if you have a very hard-panned signal (say, two microphones +that point in diametrically opposite directions), which can sound odd when +the listener is using headphones. Going further to the left, at -100%, the +left and right channels are exactly swapped and between -100% and 0% is again +a reversion with partial leaking. The range between -100% and 0% +is for convenience only, as you could achieve the same effect by swapping the +two channels in the input mapping. Note that the entire control is grayed out +if the signal is provably mono (ie., the same input channel is mapped to both +left and right). + + .. _midi-control: MIDI controllers