
The same with less exaggerated perspective and in "Solid" view and a different choice of grid lines - "31 bands" corresponding to the graphic equalization sliders. Crests and grid lines obscured from view in the previous image now appear faded. The same except for "translucent" or wireframe style. The "slope" and "height" perspective parameters are exaggerated. Waterfall view of about two seconds of speech in "Opaque" or hidden-line removal style, with gridlines at octaves. I just know it looks super cool, and was easier to implement so far than it looks. Is there any clamor for this from the users? Will this really be useful to anyone in editing practice? Hard for me to say. The usual view uses color as a third axis.
Note: Proposals for Google Summer of Code projects are significantly different in structure, are submitted via Google's web app and may or may not have a corresponding proposal page.Ī waveform is a two-dimensional plot of level against time, but a spectrogram is a three-dimensional plot of power against time and frequency. Make sure it is stopped, and the settings should work.įurthermore, to access Pitch EAC, it looks like you can open the spectrogram settings, then change algorithm to Pitch EAC (it took me a while to figure this out for some reason, so I hope that's helpful to anyone making the same mistake as me). You cannot access the settings if the audio track is in play or pause mode (mine was in pause mode, I thought it was in stop mode). However, in case anyone else has the same issue all the same, my solution was to stop the audio. Update: I am an imbecile, and just solved my own problem. Could anyone perhaps help me figure out how to access the spectrogram settings and Pitch EAC? I believe I need to access these in order to set my view mode to Pitch EAC.
It does not show up at all for waveform, and is still greyed out for multi-view. However, when I set the view mode to "spectrogram," the spectrogram settings are greyed out. So I am using Audacity 2.4.2, and am attempting to see the pitch EAC spectrogram of my sound file.