BiquadFilterNode: getFrequencyResponse() method
The getFrequencyResponse() method of the BiquadFilterNode interface takes the current filtering algorithm's settings and calculates the frequency response for frequencies specified in a specified array of frequencies.
The two output arrays, magResponseOutput and
phaseResponseOutput, must be created before calling this method; they
must be the same size as the array of input frequency values
(frequencyArray).
Syntax
getFrequencyResponse(frequencyArray, magResponseOutput, phaseResponseOutput)
Parameters
frequencyArray-
A
Float32Arraycontaining an array of frequencies, specified in Hertz, which you want to filter. magResponseOutput-
A
Float32Arrayto receive the computed magnitudes of the frequency response for each frequency value in thefrequencyArray. For any frequency infrequencyArraywhose value is outside the range 0.0 tosampleRate/2 (wheresampleRateis the sample rate of theAudioContext), the corresponding value in this array isNaN. These are unitless values. phaseResponseOutput-
A
Float32Arrayto receive the computed phase response values in radians for each frequency value in the inputfrequencyArray. For any frequency infrequencyArraywhose value is outside the range 0.0 tosampleRate/2 (wheresampleRateis the sample rate of theAudioContext), the corresponding value in this array isNaN.
Return value
None (undefined).
Exceptions
InvalidAccessError-
The three arrays provided are not all of the same length.
Examples
In the following example we are using a biquad filter on a media stream (for the full
demo, see our stream-source-buffer demo live, or read the source.) As part of this demo, we get the frequency responses for this biquad
filter, for five sample frequencies. We first create the Float32Arrays we
need, one containing the input frequencies, and two to receive the output magnitude and
phase values:
const myFrequencyArray = new Float32Array(5);
myFrequencyArray[0] = 1000;
myFrequencyArray[1] = 2000;
myFrequencyArray[2] = 3000;
myFrequencyArray[3] = 4000;
myFrequencyArray[4] = 5000;
const magResponseOutput = new Float32Array(5);
const phaseResponseOutput = new Float32Array(5);
Next we create a <ul> element in our HTML to contain our results,
and grab a reference to it in our JavaScript:
<p>Biquad filter frequency response for:</p>
<ul class="freq-response-output"></ul>
const freqResponseOutput = document.querySelector(".freq-response-output");
Finally, after creating our biquad filter, we use getFrequencyResponse()
to generate the response data and put it in our arrays, then loop through each data set
and output them in a human-readable list at the bottom of the page:
const biquadFilter = audioCtx.createBiquadFilter();
biquadFilter.type = "lowshelf";
biquadFilter.frequency.value = 1000;
biquadFilter.gain.value = range.value;
// …
function calcFrequencyResponse() {
biquadFilter.getFrequencyResponse(
myFrequencyArray,
magResponseOutput,
phaseResponseOutput,
);
for (let i = 0; i <= myFrequencyArray.length - 1; i++) {
const listItem = document.createElement("li");
listItem.innerHTML = `<strong>${myFrequencyArray[i]}Hz</strong>: Magnitude ${magResponseOutput[i]}, Phase ${phaseResponseOutput[i]} radians.`;
freqResponseOutput.appendChild(listItem);
}
}
calcFrequencyResponse();
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| Web Audio API # dom-biquadfilternode-getfrequencyresponse |
Browser compatibility
BCD tables only load in the browser