johnston
SuperDirt
johnston | SuperDirt | |
---|---|---|
2 | 3 | |
4 | 510 | |
- | 2.9% | |
10.0 | 5.1 | |
over 2 years ago | 6 months ago | |
Rust | SuperCollider | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
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.
johnston
-
I made a command-line tool to assist me with writing polyrhythmic drum parts
Very excited to see this. It's very much a tool I would use, excited to give it a spin after work tonight. I also look forward to reading the code.
Other cool music tools I've seen implemented in rust:
* glicol - https://glicol.org/
* tune - https://github.com/Woyten/tune
A while back I wanted to make some tools to aid in composition and was using rust. Very partially baked, but a fun pet project to learn the language with. Generated Just Intonation pitch lattices based on my research of Ben Johnston's compositional approach. https://github.com/jcpst/johnston
-
Ask HN: What is the coding exercise you use to explore a new language?
- how easy is it to write/run tests
Here’s one version in Rust, which links to clojure, cl versions. Want to try it with Julia next due to the built-in support for rationals.
https://github.com/jcpst/johnston
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lattice_(music)
SuperDirt
-
I made a command-line tool to assist me with writing polyrhythmic drum parts
Tidalcycles actually runs SuperCollider as its sound backend, through the SuperDirt library: https://github.com/musikinformatik/SuperDirt/
-
Sonic Pi – Code based live music creation tool
Another excellent Haskell based live-coding tool: https://tidalcycles.org/
Even if you don't know Haskell, it is a delight to improvise electronic music with this library. It comes with its own mini-language for dealing with musical patterns and can synchronize with any instrument. Very extensible, the backend uses https://github.com/musikinformatik/SuperDirt, a SuperCollider extension for dealing with synths / samples / effects.
-
Libraries for (crossplatform) MIDI and OSC I/O?
Cl-collider is really nice. However, I’m trying to design something so that I can be free from SuperCollider one day. I already programmed a library in Python targeting SuperDirt for live-coding. The drawback is that I’m now dependant on SuperCollider for almost any kind of I/O (OSC pass through SC and out, as well as MIDI).
What are some alternatives?
tune - Make xenharmonic music and create synthesizer tuning files for microtonal scales.
FoxDot - Python driven environment for Live Coding
polyrhythmix - Polyrhythmically-inclinded Midi Drum generator
Orca - Esoteric Programming Language
Taipei-Torrent - A(nother) Bittorrent client written in the go programming language
supercollider - An audio server, programming language, and IDE for sound synthesis and algorithmic composition.
odin_rosettacode - Odin examples for Rosetta Code
orca - Build modern community apps with React and Node.
strudel - Web-based environment for live coding algorithmic patterns, incorporating a faithful port of TidalCycles to JavaScript
slippery-chicken - slippery chicken: algorithmic composition software in common lisp and clos
pbrt-v3 - Source code for pbrt, the renderer described in the third edition of "Physically Based Rendering: From Theory To Implementation", by Matt Pharr, Wenzel Jakob, and Greg Humphreys.
A_Gentle_Introduction_To_SuperCollider - A step-by-step tutorial for total beginners. PDF here: