Package Jitter

jit.release~

Transforms matrix data into signals

Description

jit.release~ takes floating-point jitter matrices as input and transforms the stream of jitter matrices into MSP signals.

Discussion

The object can either be set to require a matrix element of floating point data for every signal sample that it will need to put out (locked mode), or it will smoothly adjust the playback position within the internal buffer to interpolate the data based on how much data has been made available to the object (varispeed mode).

Arguments

channels[]
optional

The number of output signals. An outlet will be created for each channel and the input matrices should be composed of a separate plane for each channel.

Attributes

mode[int]

Two different modes are possible: in mode 0, jit.release~ does no intepolation and expects to receive one sample of input for every sample it needs to output. In mode 1 the playback position within the internal buffer is smoothly adjusted based on how much data has been made available to the object.

latency[float]

The amount of signal data, in milliseconds, that the object should internally buffer before starting playback. Low latency values will be more susceptible to clicking due to temporal perturbations in the event-based jitter network.

Common Box Attributes

Below is a list of attributes shared by all objects. If you want to change one of these attributes for an object based on the object box, you need to place the word sendbox in front of the attribute name, or use the object's Inspector.

annotation[symbol]

Sets the text that will be displayed in the Clue window when the user moves the mouse over the object.

background[int]: 0

Adds or removes the object from the patcher's background layer. background 1 adds the object to the background layer, background 0 removes it. Objects in the background layer are shown behind all objects in the default foreground layer.

color[4 floats]

Sets the color for the object box outline.

fontface[int]

Sets the type style used by the object. The options are:

plain
bold
italic
bold italic Possible values:

0 = 'regular'
1 = 'bold'
2 = 'italic'
3 = 'bold italic'

fontname[symbol]

Sets the object's font.

fontsize[float]

Sets the object's font size (in points). Possible values:

'8'
'9'
'10'
'11'
'12'
'13'
'14'
'16'
'18'
'20'
'24'
'30'
'36'
'48'
'64'
'72'

hidden[int]: 0

Toggles whether an object is hidden when the patcher is locked.

hint[symbol]

Sets the text that will be displayed in as a pop-up hint when the user moves the mouse over the object in a locked patcher.

ignoreclick[int]: 0

Toggles whether an object ignores mouse clicks in a locked patcher.

jspainterfile[symbol]

You can override the default appearance of a user interface object by assigning a JavaScript file with code for painting the object. The file must be in the search path.

patching_rect[4 floats]: 0. 0. 100. 0.

Sets the position and size of the object in the patcher window.

position[2 floats]
write-only

Sets the object's x and y position in both patching and presentation modes (if the object belongs to its patcher's presentation), leaving its size unchanged.

presentation[int]: 0

Sets whether an object belongs to the patcher's presentation.

presentation_rect[4 floats]: 0. 0. 0. 0.

Sets the x and y position and width and height of the object in the patcher's presentation, leaving its patching position unchanged.

rect[4 floats]
write-only

Sets the x and y position and width and height of the object in both patching and presentation modes (if the object belongs to its patcher's presentation).

size[2 floats]
write-only

Sets the object's width and height in both patching and presentation modes (if the object belongs to its patcher's presentation), leaving its position unchanged.

textcolor[4 floats]

Sets the color for the object's text in RGBA format.

textjustification[int]

Sets the justification for the object's text. Possible values:

0 = 'left'
1 = 'center'
2 = 'right'

varname[symbol]

Sets the patcher's scripting name, which can be used to address the object by name in pattr, scripting messages to thispatcher, and the js object.

See Also

Name Description
jit.buffer~ Access an MSP buffer~ in matrix form
jit.peek~ Read matrix data as an audio signal
jit.poke~ Write an audio signal into a matrix
jit.catch~ Transform signal data into matrices
peek~ Read and write sample values
poke~ Write sample values to a buffer by index