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| Date: | Thu, 2 Jan 2014 21:53:02 -0800 |
| From: | Larry Doolittle <ldoolitt AT recycle DOT lbl DOT gov> |
| To: | geda-user AT delorie DOT com |
| Subject: | Re: [geda-user] Help sending a sine wave to a speaker |
| Message-ID: | <20140103055302.GA27100@recycle.lbl.gov> |
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Friends - On Fri, Jan 03, 2014 at 04:37:41AM +0100, Peter Stuge wrote: > Rob Butts wrote: > > I use a microchip pic16f1825 to read a byte from an eeprom via spi > > and send it to a dac and ultimately to a speaker. > If you want to use sin in production maybe you should go for a > precalculated lookup table. On fixed-point and/or small microprocessors, a CORDIC will often win over the generic libc sin(). If you know the accuracy you need, you can tune the number of stages. On a strongarm, I once saved a factor of 1000 in CPU time. The table-based approach is sometimes useful, but not as general. - Larry
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