I’ve needed to detect a frequency of an audio signal a couple of times in my life, but I cannot for the love of me remember what does the FFT output actually mean. So I took this knowledge out of my latest project and packed it up in this crate.

Also this is my first potentially useful published crate, so if I missed anything, please let me know!

  • BB_C@programming.dev
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    6 months ago
        /// # Panics
        ///
        /// - if `samples.len()` does not match the `sample_count` passed to [Self::new]
        /// - if there are `NaN`s in the sample slice
    

    Since this is library code, why not make the function return a Result?

    • Traister101@lemmy.today
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      6 months ago

      Yup, libraries should usually let the consumer chose what to do with an error, not crash the program without a choice in the matter. The only real exception is performance critical low level code such as the core of a graphics or audio driver. Though in those cases crashing also often isn’t an option, you just power through and hope things aren’t too screwed up.

    • anton@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      6 months ago

      The new version seems to fix that since your comment was written, but it will stil panics if less than 2 samples are provided, unless the crate it wraps panics at an earlier point.

      let peak = buf
                  .iter()
                  .copied()
                  .enumerate()
                  .take(self.sample_count / 2)
                  .max_by_key(|(_, s)| (s.abs() * 1000.0) as u32)
                  .expect("to have at least 1 sample");