i would not embed color timing information into an ilda file as different projectors have different modulation characteristics. leave that to the ilda player to manage instead of baking it into the file.

Originally Posted by
james
It's interesting how we all have substantial knowledge and experience in this space but it is so very different.
Another wrinkle in the process of exporting anything that might be found in an ilda file is the time alignment between the scanners and the color modulation signals. Color is instantaneous but scanners take time to arrive at the positions indicated in the x y signals. This is managed in a wav by shifting samples, creating a delay on the color signals. In my wav file extensions, there is an array of integers that contains the number of samples shifted in each channel, so when the wav is read back into the app, the colors and x y (possibly z) can be properly realigned. There is nothing like this in the ilda file format because there is no notion of time, or at least there is no concept of dac close frequency.
So, if you ever have the inclination to record your signal set as multichannel wav and you'd like to convert that to ilda, you can get ilda frames that accurately represent what the wav looks like when projected. It doesn't need to have the special formatting extensions to be able to open it and realign it.
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suppose you're thinkin' about a plate o' shrimp. Suddenly someone'll say, like, plate, or shrimp, or plate o' shrimp out of the blue, no explanation. No point in lookin' for one, either. It's all part of a cosmic unconciousness.