libsoundio
Allegro
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libsoundio | Allegro | |
---|---|---|
15 | 24 | |
1,848 | 1,759 | |
- | 1.5% | |
1.2 | 8.3 | |
8 days ago | 3 days ago | |
C | C | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
libsoundio
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Audio Engineer Looking to Change Careers
Audio DSP is definitely the deep end of the pool. I believe the Zig programming language owes its creation to Andrew Kelley (the creator) trying to write stuff for an audio workbench going "damn, this is really hard to do with C, why does C suck so much" and just creating a language that's like C but without the bad parts to do it himself. I'm not joking, this is literally the origin of Zig as I've heard it from a podcast, and here is Andrew's old audio lib for proof: https://github.com/andrewrk/libsoundio
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How can I record and cut a sound in c++
http://libsound.io is a great cross platform library for reading and writing to sound cards. i have used it successfully on macos and iām sure it supports linux and possibly windows too. you will probably also need lib audio for reading and writing to files.
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Learn Enough C to Survive
Hmm... after some research it seems that I've misunderstood Zig's situation a bit. Zig has introduced null-terminated string types a couple of years ago, but still encourages you to do most string operations with slices instead. Let me explain:
Zig's string literals (which you create with parenthesis like "Hello world!") are null-terminated byte arrays, expressed as the type const [N:0]u8 (where the :0 tells you that it's null-terminated), whereas the more typical array might be written as const [N]u8. The reason for this feature is not because the language wants you to use null-terminated strings, but because these static strings need to be stored in the global data section of the ELF executable, and these require you to use null-termination. But if you want to do any mutable operation with this string, you need to convert this into a proper slice (ptr + size). And it seems like Zig developers don't really use null-terminated types that much at the API level, but use it for things like C interop or cases where you really need it for special optimizations.
Noting that from the PR that introduced this feature, Andrew Kelley writes:
> I think you will find that the Zig community in general (and especially myself) agrees with you on this [null-terminated strings being fragile], and APIs in general should prefer slices to null terminated pointers. Even if you are using Zig to create a C library, and even in actual C libraries, I would recommend pointer and length arguments rather than null terminated pointers, like this: https://github.com/andrewrk/libsoundio/blob/1.1.0/soundio/so...
> That being said, I want to repeat what I said earlier about null terminated pointers: A null terminated array is not inherently an evil C concept that is intruding in the Zig language. It's a general data storage technique that is valid for some memory constrained use cases. I also stumbled on a Real Actual Use Case inside LLVM. The bottom line for me is that null terminated pointers exist in the real world, and especially in systems programming. You can see this in interfaces with the operating system in the standard library...
So he acknowledges null-terminated strings can certainly be useful in certain situations outside of legacy reasons, which is good to know. And Zig creating a special type for this shows that a good systems language needs to be designed to accommodate the needs of the outside world.
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Ask HN: Cross platform method for accessing system audio output?
Perhaps you could use either http://libsound.io/ or SDL2 game library + SDLAudioIn (http://burningsmell.org/sdl_audioin/) which provides low-level APIs to access operating-system sound systems like Alsa, PulseAudio, PipeWire, and CoreAudio (not sure how well it is supported by SDL2).
Comparison: https://github.com/andrewrk/libsoundio/wiki/libsoundio-vs-SD...
- Libsoundio ā cross-platform audio input and output
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Is programming truly for me?
Fun fact: Andrew Kelley, the creator of the Zig programming language, kind of created it so he could work on audio processing.
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libsoundio: why does one sine play without cuts, but adding another or more produces periodic-like clicks?
Based on: https://github.com/andrewrk/libsoundio/blob/master/example/sio_sine.c
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Library for detecting if a user is speaking into the microphone
Does this fit your needs? https://github.com/andrewrk/libsoundio
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Jam live with your friends with Svelte!
I listened to the Co-recursive podcast the other day that featured Andrew Kelley, the creator of the Zig programming language. Before Zig he developed Libsoundio - https://github.com/andrewrk/Libsoundio, to solve problems around realtime audio.
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Mach Engine: The future of graphics (with Zig)
Audio will probably come later, but libsoundio will be the first thing in terms of groundwork. Integrating that in the same way we've integrated GLFW, so you can just cross compile and get cross-platform audio to boot.
Allegro
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Not only Unity...
Allegro (zlib/plain C) https://github.com/liballeg/allegro5
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Allegro library website redirected to anti-Kotaku Nazi-related page
Some nutjob has taken control of https://liballeg.org to redirect it to some anti-Nazi page that mentions Kotaku, comparing them to nazis.
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Self taught developers, what did you know when you started?
C, C++, Allegro, SDL, Some rudimentary SQL, Some basic BSD Sockets. But I also took some time to learn 3D math, trigonometry and linear algebra so I can include some basic 3D examples in my portfolio. I was later told that it was the 3D math that made the difference because if I (barely finished HS) can do that I can probably learn everything they give me.
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Recourses to make games like they did in the 90s?
Wow, DJGPP and Allegro (still going!), that takes me back - that and Bloodshed IDE were my weapons of choice back then!
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What are some of your favourite tools/libraries/frameworks to visualize or prototype something
liballeg.org
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Looking for a very basic 2d graphics library
allegro 5 is quite alright with fonts
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What are some cool modern libraries you enjoy using?
allegro5 is a great rendering library if you want to get something 2D on the screen fast
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Are there other examples of people who made games with their own engines like Minecraft ?
Hell, their website says in the first few sentences it isn't an engine.
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Where to start?
A while ago I was getting started with the Allegro5 game engine (+Rust bindings). It's the same engine used for Factorio. I wrote a simple egui-integration to have nicer UI options. It was mostly for myself and is thus poorly documented but maybe you get some ideas how to make it work.
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Resources for C++
Here's a simple program using Allegro
What are some alternatives?
miniaudio - Audio playback and capture library written in C, in a single source file.
raylib - A simple and easy-to-use library to enjoy videogames programming
portaudio - PortAudio is a cross-platform, open-source C language library for real-time audio input and output.
Cocos2d - Cocos2d-x is a suite of open-source, cross-platform, game-development tools utilized by millions of developers across the globe. Its core has evolved to serve as the foundation for Cocos Creator 1.x & 2.x.
soloud - Free, easy, portable audio engine for games
GLFW - A multi-platform library for OpenGL, OpenGL ES, Vulkan, window and input
cubeb - Cross platform audio library
Godot - Godot Engine ā Multi-platform 2D and 3D game engine
ZLib - A massively spiffy yet delicately unobtrusive compression library.
Spring RTS game engine - A powerful free cross-platform RTS game engine. - Report issues at https://springrts.com/mantis/
libvips - A fast image processing library with low memory needs.
Oxygine - Oxygine is C++ engine and framework for 2D games on iOS, Android, Windows, Linux and Mac