On Fri, Jan 28, 2022 at 01:35:23PM +0100, David Kastrup wrote: > I cannot speak in general terms, but you need to keep several sources > with different note lengths in sync. LilyPond, a music typesetter, does > this by using exact rational numbers. Exponential speedups/slowdowns > are pretty bad at managing the mapping of a rational note length grid to > a rational timeline, with nominators and denominators of manageable > size. So one needs to be somewhat careful about the formulas to employ. I rational arithmetic is used to avoid accumulating small errors (that is the normal use case) I don't see the need for it in this context. Tempo ramps happen between begin and end points and as long as these are accurate, there will be no accumlating error. For example you could express time as integer microseconds and beats as k / N with N something like 2^8 * 3^4 * 5 * 7 which allows all common divisions of a beat to be exact with integer k [1]. The calculations that map time to beats or beats to time _within_ a tempo ramp can be safely done using floating point (as an offset from the start point) and the results rounded to the rational format. [1] And if ever you have to divide a beat by a number that doesn't divide N, there is always the Bresenhan algorithm. Ciao, -- FA _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user