# terminal-oscilloscope A terminal-based oscilloscope with CRT phosphor physics, written in Nim. Zero dependencies — 200KB binary, just libc. ![demo](demo.gif) ## Features - **CRT boot/shutdown animations** — phosphor ramp, beam sweep, vertical collapse, dot fade - **Y-T and X-Y modes** — time-domain waveform or Lissajous figures - **Phosphor persistence** — beam bloom, decay trails, intensity-based shading - **Half-block rendering** — 2x vertical resolution using Unicode `▀▄█` characters - **Live audio capture** — direct libav bindings via dlopen, zero install - **Threaded audio** — 60fps rendering, audio capture on separate thread - **6 CRT phosphor palettes** — green, amber, cyan, blue, white, red ## Install Requires [Nim](https://nim-lang.org/) 2.x. ```bash git clone https://github.com/rolandnsharp/terminal-oscilloscope.git cd terminal-oscilloscope nim c -d:release --threads:on -o:osc src/osc.nim ./osc ``` ## Controls | Key | Action | |-----|--------| | `m` | Toggle Y-T / X-Y mode | | `+` / `-` | Increase / decrease gain (amplitude) | | `]` / `[` | Zoom in / out time axis | | `q` | Quit (with CRT shutdown effect) | ## Configuration Edit the constants at the top of `src/osc.nim`: ```nim const # Phosphor physics Decay = 0.85 # persistence per frame (0.0–1.0) Beam = 0.4 # intensity at beam impact Bloom = 0.08 # horizontal glow spread # Phosphor glow thresholds HotGlow = 0.7 # white-hot beam core WarmGlow = 0.4 # bright phosphor CoolGlow = 0.15 # dim persistence trail # Palette: green, amber, cyan, blue, white, red Palette = "green" ``` ### Palettes | Name | Phosphor | Look | |------|----------|------| | `green` | P31 | classic oscilloscope | | `amber` | P12 | warm retro terminal | | `cyan` | P7 | Tektronix blue-green | | `blue` | P11 | cool/modern | | `white` | P4 | TV phosphor | | `red` | P22-R | radar display | ## Audio Captures system audio by opening the PulseAudio/PipeWire monitor of your default output sink directly via libavformat and libavdevice. Libraries are loaded at runtime with `dlopen` — no dev packages, no subprocess, no extra dependencies. ## Credits CRT turn-on/off animations inspired by [AetherTune](https://github.com/nevermore23274/AetherTune).