I don't know C well at all, and I'm trying to edit someone's code, but I'm having issues when trying to convert values from the log to linear domains.
For example, let's say we have an array A that is full of log values equal to -100 dB, i.e.
float A[100];
int i;
for( i=0; i<100; i++ )
A[i] = -100;
What I want to do is find the average of all the values (which clearly is -100), but by taking the average in the linear and not log domain, i.e.
float tmp_avg = 0.0;
float avg;
int count = 0;
for( i=0; i<100; i++ ) {
tmp_avg += pow(10.0, A[i]/10.0);
count++;
}
avg = 10*log10(tmp_avg / count);
However, the result I'm getting is all 0's. Now the code I'm working on is much more complex than this, but I was wondering if there's anything obvious that I'm missing as to why this won't work.
One thought I had is that 10^(-100/10) is a very small value (1e-10), and perhaps too small to be accurately defined as a float. I've tried making it a double instead, but I still get a result of all 0's.
Thanks!
avgcomes out as-100. I did have to fix a variable name typo in your last calculation, but other than that it's fine. – Carl Norum Jan 13 at 23:57