FoxDot
ableton-git
FoxDot | ableton-git | |
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12 | 4 | |
1,007 | 115 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
8 months ago | 3 months ago | |
Python | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
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FoxDot
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I made EDM music from 18 lines of code (full video linked below)
Thanks! I used a python library called Foxdot: https://foxdot.org/
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Ask HN: Alternatives to Scratch for a Blind Child?
My comment won't really be helpful, but it feels like an interesting question to spitball some thoughts...
1. The domain is super important for children's programming. Logo started out doing list processing and word-based games and kids just weren't that into it; it's the turtle that really made it feel real and exciting. Scratch similarly has a really concrete and fun domain (moving sprites). The exact things that good learning environments have (lots of visuals and movement) don't seem very fun when you are blind (though maybe there's ways to experience that output that I'm not aware of).
2. My natural intuition is that voice and music are fun. Maybe there's tactile things I am unaware of. Maybe Lego Mindstorms?
3. FoxDot is a really fun programming environment for creating live music: https://github.com/Qirky/FoxDot – it's very textual, and I'm not sure how easy that is (especially if you are trying to interact while the music is playing). It's based on Supercollider: https://supercollider.github.io/ – it's possible there's other more accessible frontends for Supercollider.
4. Here's something someone did with Supercollider: https://www.researchgate.net/figure/The-technology-set-up-a-...
5. That reminds me of Makey Makey, which is very tactile and very affordable. But it's basically just an input device. https://makeymakey.com/ – really you can't go wrong getting that and hooking it up to a sound player or having the kid find new and inventive ways to create tactile frontends to it. I'm sure other kids will be impressed with what this kid comes up with. Here's a page on using it with blind kids: https://www.perkins.org/resource/makey-makey-stem-activities...
6. It's OK if it's not "programming" IMHO. Building things with computers is fun and good learning. Giving the kid a new medium to build things is important, with or without complicated logic. I think there is a benefit to what I'll call more inclusively "coding" which is representing your goals and thoughts in some special format, like HTML or music notation or whatever.
7. Speech input and output in the browser is pretty easy and accessible. But I don't know of anything that brings all that together in a programming-like experience. Using GPT I bet there's something possible and not super complicated that could be created today that couldn't have happened a year ago.
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Sonic Pi – The Live Coding Music Synth for Everyone
FoxDot is probably what you're looking for.
https://foxdot.org/
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Is there a "multiplayer" DAW?
As for software, I think the 2 most popular live coding environments are FoxDot (which is Python based and works well with Troop), and Sonic Pi (which I don't think has "multiplayer"). Its been a while since I looked into this style of beat making, so maybe things have changed. But these are good places to start.
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Looking for specific drum pattern link.
PureData is a hell of a rabbit hole! You might also want to check out SuperCollider which is more modern. If you want to skip to the fun stuff there's FoxDot and SonicPi. Both are live coding environments built on SuperCollider.
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[CRASH SERVER] --- track fully (live) coded in Python with FoxDot/Troop/Supercollider, Audio reactive visuals
If you want more info on how to code music in python check our website [crashserver.fr] or [FoxDot] - main project in python
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Please forgive my ignorance, but what is python useful for? I've been thinking about learning it because it seems like a lot of people are interested in it, but what kinds of things could I do with it?
you can make cool music with FoxDot and Supercollider
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Python equivalent to sonic pi for live music creation ?
FoxDot
- Live Coding with FoxDot
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Ruby vs. Python comes down to the for loop
Not sure how they compare feature-wise, but take a look at FoxDot:
https://github.com/Qirky/FoxDot
ableton-git
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Splice Sunsetting "Splice Studio" - Make sure you download your backups before May 31st.
I very briefly looked into it awhile ago but haven't tried versioning with git myself...that said I did come across a very interesting fact that Ableton als files are just unzipped XML files. Heres the repo for some dude who spun up a very barebones Ableton git wrapper. Gonna try it out later tonight myself. https://github.com/clintburgos/ableton-git
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One Thing....
This is really just demonstrating how useful version control (like git) would be for creative works. It looks like there's at least one person who's tried making a utility to allow for this here., though I really feel like it's a problem that should be solved by the developers of Ableton (and every other DAW, for that matter).
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Is there a "multiplayer" DAW?
I've wanted this for a while too. I've googled it and seen a few attempts with Ableton, like here and here but I have switched over to Bitwig and don't see myself going back. The implementation isn't perfect, but it's a start. Since there are large git-lfs could be used. I would love to see more work in this area, approaching music in a similar way to coding.
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Splice is not a Version Control, so is there any service you would recommend?
Also, as /u/onlyonequickquestion mentioned below, you can use git for ableton
What are some alternatives?
Sonic Pi - Code. Music. Live.
RemotePlayWhatever - Tiny application that lets you force remote play together any game you have in your steam library including non-steam ones.
vim-sonic-pi - Sonic Pi plugin for (Neo)Vim
Troop - Real-time Live Coding collaboration app
Orca - Esoteric Programming Language
SuperDirt - Tidal Audio Engine
supercollider - An audio server, programming language, and IDE for sound synthesis and algorithmic composition.
sardine - Python's missing "algorave" module
orca - Build modern community apps with React and Node.
orca - C Multi-REST API library for Discord, Slack, Reddit, etc.
awesome-livecoding - All things livecoding