Let's take a look at how to read an audio file and visualize the signal. This will be a good starting point, and it will give us a good understanding of the basic structure of audio signals. Before we start, we need to understand that audio files are digitized versions of actual audio signals. Actual audio signals are complex, continuous-valued waves. In order to save a digital version, we sample the signal and convert it into numbers. For example, speech is commonly sampled at 44,100 Hz. This means that each second of the signal is broken down into 44,100 parts, and the values at these timestamps are stored. In other words, you store a value every 1/44,100 seconds. As the sampling rate is high, we feel that the signal is continuous when we listen to it on our media players.
United States
Great Britain
India
Germany
France
Canada
Russia
Spain
Brazil
Australia
South Africa
Thailand
Ukraine
Switzerland
Slovakia
Luxembourg
Hungary
Romania
Denmark
Ireland
Estonia
Belgium
Italy
Finland
Cyprus
Lithuania
Latvia
Malta
Netherlands
Portugal
Slovenia
Sweden
Argentina
Colombia
Ecuador
Indonesia
Mexico
New Zealand
Norway
South Korea
Taiwan
Turkey
Czechia
Austria
Greece
Isle of Man
Bulgaria
Japan
Philippines
Poland
Singapore
Egypt
Chile
Malaysia