Python Scipy FFT wav files

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闹比i
闹比i 2020-11-27 13:22

I have a handful of wav files. I\'d like to use SciPy FFT to plot the frequency spectrum of these wav files. How would I go about doing this?

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  •  感动是毒
    2020-11-27 13:28

    Python provides several api to do this fairly quickly. I download the sheep-bleats wav file from this link. You can save it on the desktop and cd there within terminal. These lines in the python prompt should be enough: (omit >>>)

    import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
    from scipy.fftpack import fft
    from scipy.io import wavfile # get the api
    fs, data = wavfile.read('test.wav') # load the data
    a = data.T[0] # this is a two channel soundtrack, I get the first track
    b=[(ele/2**8.)*2-1 for ele in a] # this is 8-bit track, b is now normalized on [-1,1)
    c = fft(b) # calculate fourier transform (complex numbers list)
    d = len(c)/2  # you only need half of the fft list (real signal symmetry)
    plt.plot(abs(c[:(d-1)]),'r') 
    plt.show()
    

    Here is a plot for the input signal:
    signal

    Here is the spectrum spectrum

    For the correct output, you will have to convert the xlabelto the frequency for the spectrum plot.

    k = arange(len(data))
    T = len(data)/fs  # where fs is the sampling frequency
    frqLabel = k/T  
    

    If you are have to deal with a bunch of files, you can implement this as a function: put these lines in the test2.py:

    import matplotlib.pyplot as plt
    from scipy.io import wavfile # get the api
    from scipy.fftpack import fft
    from pylab import *
    
    def f(filename):
        fs, data = wavfile.read(filename) # load the data
        a = data.T[0] # this is a two channel soundtrack, I get the first track
        b=[(ele/2**8.)*2-1 for ele in a] # this is 8-bit track, b is now normalized on [-1,1)
        c = fft(b) # create a list of complex number
        d = len(c)/2  # you only need half of the fft list
        plt.plot(abs(c[:(d-1)]),'r')
        savefig(filename+'.png',bbox_inches='tight')
    

    Say, I have test.wav and test2.wav in the current working dir, the following command in python prompt interface is sufficient: import test2 map(test2.f, ['test.wav','test2.wav'])

    Assuming you have 100 such files and you do not want to type their names individually, you need the glob package:

    import glob
    import test2
    files = glob.glob('./*.wav')
    for ele in files:
        f(ele)
    quit()
    

    You will need to add getparams in the test2.f if your .wav files are not of the same bit.

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