Re: itime vs time

From: Eric Scheirer (eds@media.mit.edu)
Date: Tue Oct 26 1999 - 08:35:42 EDT


I was thinking "time in this instance".

'time' is the startup time of the instrument.
'itime' is the elapsed time of this instance.
So time+itime is the current orchestra time.
You have to write your own a-rate counter if you
want to count samples.

 -- Eric

-----Original Message-----
From: Ross Bencina <rossb@audiomulch.com>
To: saol-dev@media.mit.edu <saol-dev@media.mit.edu>
Date: Tuesday, October 26, 1999 2:08 AM
Subject: itime vs time

>hi all,
>
>I'm wondering if someone can tell my what the "i" in itime stands for,
>because to me the intuitive thing would have been:
>
>itime == instantiation time
>time == current time
>
>but infact the meanings are opposite (unless there is a bug in the fdis).
>
>Ross.
>
>



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