Sonic Charge Permut8 User Manual

Page 7

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MSK

Use MSK to selectively "mask out" the result of instruction 1. This is most useful in
SYNC mode. Each bit in the STEP MASK operand represents an eighth of the full

"memory cycle", i.e. if CLOCK FREQ is set to 1/1, each bit represents an eighth
note. When a bit is zero

(switch is down)

, Instruction 1 is ignored. The SUBTRACT

operand lets you delay the output signal. It uses the same exponential scale as SUB.

SUB

With the SUB operator you simply subtract fixed amounts from the read positions of
the left and right channel. This create delays where the exact time is defined by the
operands and the clock frequency. The two operands follow exponential scales
where values under 80 are typically used for tuning "comb filter" effects. If you hover
the mouse over the hex displays a popup hint will show the effective delay lengths as

percentages of the full "memory cycle". E.g. if you enter STD SYNC mode and set
the CLOCK FREQ to 1/1, F0F0 will create a delay of 1/2 bars.

If you put

Permut8

in REV mode the actual delay lengths become inverted. E.g. 00

will be exactly 100%. If you need a SUB operator for the first instruction, use OSC

with a RATE of 0. If you want to control the delay length of both left and right chan-
nels from a single operand, use MSK with a STEP MASK of FF

(all bits set)

.

NOP

NOP is short for "No Operation" and does exactly that. Nothing. It is the bypass op-

erator.

!

© 2012 NuEdge Development!

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