VeeSeeVSTRack
faust
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VeeSeeVSTRack | faust | |
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30 | 54 | |
252 | 2,408 | |
- | 1.7% | |
1.8 | 9.6 | |
almost 3 years ago | 3 days ago | |
C | C++ | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
VeeSeeVSTRack
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ReaRoute with VCV Rack issues
There is also VeeSeeVSTRack https://github.com/bsp2/VeeSeeVSTRack
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Rack 2 (Virtual Eurorack)
Since some people don’t like the cathedral development style VCV rack uses, I point people to a fork of an older version of VCV rack with two features VCV rack 2 doesn’t have:
* It can run as a VST plugin, so one can use it with their favorite digital audio workstation (DAW)
* The code is BSD licensed
Here is that VST plugin fork: https://github.com/bsp2/VeeSeeVSTRack#downloads
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How do you integrate VCV with Ableton?
Hete is an old VST port I found. Haven't used it in a while so I don't know if it's stable: https://github.com/bsp2/VeeSeeVSTRack
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Bespoke Synth 1.0 – open-source software modular synthesizer
* The VST fork of VCVrack for a modular synth: https://github.com/bsp2/VeeSeeVSTRack#downloads
I would get a keyboard controller with full sized keys and a 5-pin DIN MIDI out for just over $200, but that can come later.
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Why I'll never create modules for VCV Rack anymore
Again, I prefer the fork at https://github.com/bsp2/VeeSeeVSTRack#downloads because it’s a working VSTi, and because it’s under a BSD (not GPL) license, which has more flexibility in certain circumstances; I remember the arguments around 2001 or 2002 when there were concerns Python’s license was not “GPL compatible”, so I have always found GPL licenses pedantic.
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Is there any proper manual for the Behringer Crave? (Besides the quick start guide)
Try vcvrack.com to get a handle on the basic principles.
- Welche Freewares zum Musik produzieren?
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LMMS can control VCV Rack through MIDI
I set up a drum beat and a pattern on a muted track to control this Eurorack simulator. https://vcvrack.com/
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Does anyone know exactly what this does?
Here's the best way to learn about synthesis. https://vcvrack.com/
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Please help me grok use cases for modular.
Since nobody else has mentioned it, you might want to try VCV Rack. It's a pretty good modular synth in software (bonus, it's free!). You can save and load complete patches, so it scratches that itch to recapture a complex configuration. Lots of good information in its dedicated subreddit.
faust
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My Sixth Year as a Bootstrapped Founder
Glicol looks very cool! Also check out Faust if you haven't (https://faust.grame.fr), another FP sound programming language.
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Welcome to the Chata Programming Language
The linked (https://github.com/grame-cncm/faust) looks reasonable to me.
Chata probably needs to work out roughly what the semantics of the language should be. Its good to know what the library support is intended to be as that informs language design (assuming the library is to be implemented in chata anyway). Quite a lot of this page is about syntax.
There are some design decisions that have deep impact on programming languages. Reflection, mutation, memory management, control flow, concurrency. There are some implementation choices that end up constraining the language spec - python seems full of these.
Echoing p4bl0, implementing the language will change the spec. Writing a spec up front might be an interesting exercise anyway. I'd encourage doing both at the same time - sometimes describe what a feature should be and then implement it, sometimes implement something as best you can and then describe what you've got.
Implementation language will affect how long it takes to get something working, how good the thing will be and what you'll think about along the way. The usual guidance is to write in something familiar to you, ideally with pattern matching as compilers do a lot of DAG transforms.
- I'd say that writing a language in C took me ages and forced me to really carefully think through the data representation.
- Writing one in lua took very little time but the implementation was shaky, probably because it let me handwave a lot of the details.
- Writing a language in itself, from a baseline of not really having anything working, makes for very confusing debugging and (eventually) a totally clear understanding of the language semantics.
Good luck with the project.
- Faust: A functional programming language for audio synthesis and processing
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Live + Python = ❤️
Faust integration would be awesome: https://faust.grame.fr Then again we have MaxMSP, so in the end it feels kind of redundant
- Glicol: Next-generation computer music language
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Csound
Csound is extremely powerful, but my favorite thing in this vein these days is Faust:
https://faust.grame.fr/
It's a functional language with a nice way of generating diagrams of DSP algorithms, but its big killer feature for me is its language bindings, which include C, C++, Cmajor, Codebox, CSharp, DLang, Java, JAX, Julia, JSFX, "old" C++, Rust, VHDL, and WebAssembly (wast/wasm) out of the box.
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faust VS midica - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 12 Aug 2023
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Libraries / frameworks / tooling for cross-platform (LV2/VST3) C++ plug-ins (open-source)
Have a look at FAUST as well: https://faust.grame.fr/
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logueSDK for beginners
Once you have an idea of basic programming practice, you need to learn some DSP programming. One of the better tools for this is Faust https://faust.grame.fr/ , bear in mind this is a functional programming language, and has very different syntax to C++, but the same principles apply.
- Where is a good place to get started with DSP coding?
What are some alternatives?
Cardinal - Virtual modular synthesizer plugin
supercollider - An audio server, programming language, and IDE for sound synthesis and algorithmic composition.
pipewire - Mirror of the PipeWire repository (see https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/)
csound - Main repository for Csound
lmms - Cross-platform music production software
SOUL - The SOUL programming language and API
pedalboard - 🎛 🔊 A Python library for audio.
yummyDSP - An Arduino audio DSP library for the Espressif ESP32 and probably other 32 bit machines
helm - Helm - a free polyphonic synth with lots of modulation
pyo - Python DSP module
Enzyme - High-performance automatic differentiation of LLVM and MLIR.