Eventide H8000FW User's Guide Page 26

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The Harmonizer
®
Programmer’s Manual
© 1999-2008 Eventide, Inc. Page 24 of 97 Release 1.3
SENDING PROGRAMS TO THE HARMONIZER
Once you’ve constructed a program in Vsigfile, you’ll want to send it to the
Harmonizer so that it can be run. This is accomplished by selecting the Send
command under the Midi menu. Make sure that the Harmonizer is in some area
other than the Patch Editor area when you Send, lest errors occur! Be warned:
the program running on the currently displayed DSP will be “bumped out” by the program you Send!
Save any changes before you Send!
Your computer must be communicating with the Harmonizer for this to work! See Communications on page 16.
TUTORIAL 1 -A SIMPLE PROGRAM
We can couple our new found knowledge of Vsigfile with the material we learned in the General
Principles Chapter to create a simple, but meaningful, program. We’ll create a modulating filter.
To begin, start with a clean slate by pressing the
button. You should see
a work area that looks like the one shown to the right. The green “in1 >” and
in2 >” on the left represent the inputs 1 and 2 on the DSP that will
eventually run the program (we’ll learn how to do quad programs for Orville later, but
the idea is the same)
. Similarly, the green “> out1” and “> out2” on the right
represent the outputs 1 and 2 on the DSP that will eventually run the
program. The blue “1, 2, 3, and 4” on the left represent the “global inputs”
(these only have meaning for Orville’s dual DSPs, and we’ll learn about them in “Inter-
DSP Communication” on page
56). The pink “1” on the right represents the first
userobject input on the head module. Recall that the userobject outputs of
modules are connected to the head module so that their menu pages will
appear in the PARAMETER area.
To create a “modulating filter” program, we’ll
need just two modules: an LFO
(low frequency
oscillator)
module and a modfilter module.
Go ahead and add these modules to the program
by using the Add Module command from the Edit
menu. You’ll find the LFO module in the
“Oscillator” group and the modfilter module
in the “Filter” group.
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