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!
/// # 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
?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.
Thanks for the tip! Updated
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");
You should have mentioned OP.
@fil
Excellent catch! Added validation for the
new
params