<h2>Mono Panner User Interface</h2>
-<img src="/images/mono-panner-annotated.png" alt="image of the mono panner"/>
+<figure class="left">
+ <img src="/images/mono-panner.png" alt="The mono panner">
+ <figcaption>
+ The mono panner
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
-<p class="note">
- The mono panner looks a quite similar to the
- <a href="@@stereo-panner">stereo panner</a>
+
+<p>
+ The mono panner looks quite similar to the <a href="@@stereo-panner">stereo panner</a>
interface. The difference is that the L/R labels in the lower half
of the mono panner do not move because there is no "width" to
control.
</p>
+<p>
+ On the adjacent picture, the panner is centered, as shown by the central
+ position of the slider, called <dfn>position indicator</dfn>.
+</p>
<h2>Using the mouse</h2>
<tr><th><kbd class="mod1 mouse">⇓</kbd> or <kbd class="mod1 mouse">⇒</kbd></th>
<td>move position to the right by 5°</td></tr>
</table>
-
<h2>Stereo Panner User Interface</h2>
-<img src="/images/stereo-panner-annotated.png" alt=""/>
+<figure class="left">
+ <img src="/images/stereo-panner.png" alt="The Stereo Panner">
+ <figcaption>
+ The Stereo Panner
+ </figcaption>
+</figure>
+
<p>
The <dfn>panner user interface</dfn> consists of three elements, divided between
the top and bottom half. Click and/or drag in the top half to
a pair of numbers that will be familiar to most audio engineers.
</p>
-<table>
+<table class="nodl">
<tr><th>Position</th><th>L/R</th><th>English</th></tr>
<tr><td>0</td><td>L=50% R=50%</td><td>signal image is midway between
left and right speakers</td></tr>
<h3>Examples In Use</h3>
-<table>
+<table class="nodl">
<tr><th>Appearance</th><th>Settings</th></tr>
<tr><td><img src="/images/stereo-panner.png"></td><td>Width=100%,
L=50 R=50</td></tr>
carefully for artefacts if you manipulate unknown stereo signals—many
orchestra sample libraries for example do contain time-delay components.
</p>
-