Signal Processing Toolbox | ![]() ![]() |
Open the digital signal processing GUI (SPTool)
Syntax
Description
sptool
opens SPTool, a graphical user interface (GUI) that manages a suite of four other GUIs. These GUIs provide access to many of the signal, filter, and spectral analysis functions in the toolbox. When you type sptool
at the command line, the following GUI opens.
You can activate the four integrated signal processing GUIs from SPTool.
Signal Browser
The Signal Browser allows you to view, measure, and analyze the time-domain information of one or more signals. To activate the Signal Browser, press the View button under the Signals list box in SPTool.
Filter Designer
The Filter Designer allows you to design and edit FIR and IIR filters of various lengths and types, with standard (lowpass, highpass, bandpass, bandstop, and multiband) configurations. To activate the Filter Designer, press either the New button or the Edit button under the Filters list box in SPTool.
The Filter Designer has a Pole/Zero Editor you can access from the Algorithms pulldown.
Filter Viewer
The Filter Viewer allows you to view the characteristics of a designed or imported filter, including its magnitude response, phase response, group delay, pole-zero plot, impulse response, and step response. To activate the Filter Viewer, press the View button under the Filters list box in SPTool.
You can analyze multiple filter responses by checking several response plot options, as shown in the next figure.
Spectrum Viewer
The Spectrum Viewer allows you to graphically analyze frequency-domain data using a variety of methods of spectral density estimation, including the Burg method, the FFT method, the multitaper method (MTM), the MUSIC eigenvector method, Welch's method, and the Yule-Walker AR method. To activate the Spectrum Viewer:
In addition, you can right-click in any plot display area of the GUIs to modify signal properties.
See SPTool: A Signal Processing GUI Suite for a full discussion of how to use SPTool.
See Also
![]() | specgram | square | ![]() |