Convert .csv to .wav audio
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Debagnik
le 16 Avr 2020
Réponse apportée : Walter Roberson
le 10 Août 2023
I am fairly new to matlab
I wanted to convert a comma separated value (.csv) file to a Wave (.wav) audio file while also plotting it.
I saw this previously answered Here on matlab answers but I had a few questions and some errors, for the sake of simplicity I have attached the code and the csv file here
error shown is
Undefined function or variable 'y'.
Error in Untitled (line 17)
audiowrite('audio_output.wav',y,Fs)
and I did not understand why in the code the variable 'y' and 'Fs' are there in code
clc;
clear all;
close all;
data=csvread("output.csv");
time=data(: ,1);
output=data(: ,2);
plot(time,output);
save('aec.mat','time','output');
load aec.mat
filename='audio_output.wav';
Fs=6000;
audiowrite('audio_output.wav',y,Fs)
clear y Fs
[y,Fs]=audioread(filename);
sound(y,Fs);
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Geoff Hayes
le 16 Avr 2020
Modifié(e) : Geoff Hayes
le 16 Avr 2020
Debagnik - the y variable represents the audio samples. In your case, that would be output. Just change your code to the following
time = data(: ,1);
y = data(: ,2);
plot(time, y);
I see that you have set the sampling rate, Fs, to be 6000...just like in the link that you have provided. If your time data is in seconds, then it looks like you have 2.5 seconds (time(end) - time(1)) worth of data. Since there are 108569 (length(output)) samples, then this would mean your Fs could be
Fs = length(output) / (time(end) - time(1)); % 43427.6
Is this correct? Or is your sampling freqency really 6000?
4 commentaires
Geoff Hayes
le 17 Avr 2020
From audiowrite y parameter, The valid range for the data in y depends on the data type of y. For data types double (your input) the range is -1.0 to +1.0. Your input is between -6.5 and 6.0. I suppose that you could divide your data y by the maximum absolute value:
time = data(: ,1);
y = data(: ,2);
y = y / max(abs(min(y)),max(y));
Plus de réponses (2)
Mehreen Jabbeen
le 25 Avr 2021
clc;
clear all;
close all;
y=csvread("original.csv");
display(y)
filename='yes.wav';
Fs=16000;
audiowrite(filename,y,Fs)
clear y Fs
[y,Fs]=audioread(filename);
display(y)
display(Fs)
sound(y,Fs);
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Walter Roberson
le 10 Août 2023
The time in the file is not uniformly sampled. The data needs to be resampled before being written to a file. Also, the file contains duplicate times with different data.
From previous discussion and the evidence of the file, we know that the file is intended to represent 2.5 seconds. The number of entries in the file is about 7 1/2 times greater than 2.5 seconds * 6000 samples/second .
We cannot just resample because the input is not regular timesteps. We cannot just use fft methods either for the same reason. We cannot use interp1 because of the duplicate times.
data = csvread("output.csv");
time = data(: ,1);
output = data(: ,2);
filename='audio_output.wav';
Fs=6000;
TT = timetable(output, 'RowTimes', seconds(time));
TT = retime(TT, 'regular', 'mean', 'TimeStep', seconds(1/Fs));
t = TT.Properties.RowTimes;
y = rescale(TT.output, -1, 1);
audiowrite('audio_output.wav', y, Fs)
plot(t, y)
sound(y, Fs);
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