Yes. But if you're interested in the purity of your peak using a PDA detector, you might be able to find the software's peak purity function. It will compare the spectra across multiple slices of the peak, and give a threshold of probability that the peak is pure, based on subtle spectral changes -- not necessarily another wavelength peak in the extracted spectrum, but also any change in the spectrum that might be caused by another wavelength hidden underneath. This is a more powerful function of the PDA detector. You will determine what threshold is significant, using the limit of detection you require for you analysis -- because the very edge of a n HPLC peak will always give a shitty purity test. And logically, towards the end (or or beginning) of an HPLC peak is when a chemically distinct peak is likely to occur.