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Full Discussion: UNIX version standards
Top Forums Programming UNIX version standards Post 35833 by hirni on Thursday 8th of May 2003 04:44:41 PM
Old 05-08-2003
UNIX version standards

I'm new to UNIX programming. I'm used to starting my program's versions at 1.0, but I look at all the UNIX programs out there and see things like 0.000.1 or 3.3.000 and I'm wondering what these things really mean. Do people just type anything they feel in there? Are things in pre-release development kept at 0-dot-whatever?

Any input would be appreciated.

Thanks,
Scott
 

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ENVEXT(1)						  The Canonical Csound Reference						 ENVEXT(1)

NAME
envext - Extracts the envelope of a file to a text file. . SYNTAX
envext [-flags] soundfile csound -U envext [-flags] soundfile INITIALIZATION
soundfile - Name of the input soundfile. The following flags are available for envext (The default values are stated in parenthesis): -o fnam Name of output filename (newenv) -w size (in seconds) of analysis window (0.25) The envext utility generates a text file containing time and amplitude pairs by finding the absolute peak within each window. EXAMPLE
Using the command (while in the manual directory): csound -U envext examples/mary.wav will produce the a text file containing the following: 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.000 0.250 0.000 0.500 0.000 0.750 0.000 1.249 0.170 1.499 0.269 1.530 0.307 1.872 0.263 2.056 0.304 2.294 0.241 2.570 0.216 2.761 0.178 3.077 0.011 3.251 0.001 3.500 0.000 Which shows the time for the peak amplitude within each measured window. CREDITS
Author: John ffitch 1995 AUTHORS
Barry Vercoe MIT Media Lab Author. Dan Ellis MIT Media Lab, Cambridge Massachussetts Author. COPYRIGHT
5.07 06/23/2009 ENVEXT(1)
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