Digital lowpass - highpass filters

D

Death Eater Dan

Jan 1, 1970
0
Can anyone direct me to a site that explains why when you invert every
second sample of a digital filter you can change from low pass to high pass
filters. I dont understand it and my text books do not mention it.

Cheers,
Dan.
 
R

Richard Freeman

Jan 1, 1970
0
Death Eater Dan said:
Can anyone direct me to a site that explains why when you invert every
second sample of a digital filter you can change from low pass to high pass
filters. I dont understand it and my text books do not mention it.

Got Excel ? or Lotus 1,2,3 ? try it on a spreadsheet it all starts to make
more sense then.
Digital Filters are Mathematical Constructs not Engineering ones and you
need to analyse them using mathemical tools.

For an Excellent Text book ( in fact one of the few that made any sense as
most of them are written by mathematicians) on Digital Signal Processing may
I reccomend this book : http://www.dspguide.com/ Not readily available in
Australia unfortunately but readily available from Amazon (it is not cheap
but well worth every cent)
 
N

Newsy

Jan 1, 1970
0
Richard Freeman said:
Got Excel ? or Lotus 1,2,3 ? try it on a spreadsheet it all starts to make
more sense then.
Digital Filters are Mathematical Constructs not Engineering ones and you
need to analyse them using mathemical tools.

For an Excellent Text book ( in fact one of the few that made any sense as
most of them are written by mathematicians) on Digital Signal Processing may
I reccomend this book : http://www.dspguide.com/ Not readily available in
Australia unfortunately but readily available from Amazon (it is not cheap
but well worth every cent)

Great link Richard.

You didn't mention the free download of the entire book!

Rod
 
D

Defibrillator

Jan 1, 1970
0
From the site:

IMPORTANT NOTE:
Acrobat 5.0 & Acrobat Reader 5.0 (released in March 2001) contain a bug that
prevents them from properly displaying the equations contained in these
files. This bug was corrected in a later release, Acrobat Reader 5.0.5 (Dec.
2001), which can be obtained by clicking on the icon.
 
N

Newsy

Jan 1, 1970
0
Defibrillator said:
From the site:

IMPORTANT NOTE:
Acrobat 5.0 & Acrobat Reader 5.0 (released in March 2001) contain a bug that
prevents them from properly displaying the equations contained in these
files. This bug was corrected in a later release, Acrobat Reader 5.0.5 (Dec.
2001), which can be obtained by clicking on the icon.

I'm using 6 Pro, so I didn't worry about the message.
Rod
 
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