supercollider
avendish
supercollider | avendish | |
---|---|---|
64 | 34 | |
5,206 | 412 | |
0.9% | 1.5% | |
8.4 | 8.5 | |
7 days ago | about 14 hours ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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supercollider
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Recreating the THX Deep Note (2009)
Link to the audio programming language / server they're using in the article: https://github.com/supercollider/supercollider
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supercollider VS midica - a user suggested alternative
2 projects | 12 Aug 2023
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MuseScore 4.1 is now available
For the intrepid, especially those annoyed with the purported input-sluggishness of musescore et al, an interesting text-based alternative is LilyPond https://lilypond.org/
My dad wrote an opera using LilyPond in vim, though I believe these days he's actually doing more with supercollider, which skips sheetmusic and goes right to sounds: https://supercollider.github.io/
- Has anyone tried automated mastering?
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Why'd you choose programming?
Weirdly enough,I got into programming through music. I got into making experimental electronic music and ended up learning SuperCollider. Figured I’d have to get a real job at some point and I liked learning Supercollider enough that I figured I should try to go back to school and learn some more useful programming languages
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13 Years of History Teaching - Now Thrown Into CS.
So you’re wondering what would making music with code look like? The tools I’m familiar with are TidalCycles, Sonic Pi, and SuperCollider. I’m having a hard time describing what it’s like to make music with tools like these so here’s a video of a performance. One person is live coding the music and the other is live coding the visuals. I think it’s super cool how the music is improvised and built over time by layering commands. Some keywords you could search to see more examples would be Algorave and Livecoding.
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Has anyone else noticed a weird noise coming from their Starlite?
So far mostly Vim (not for coding, just writing so far), NetHack, Firefox, and mpd and ncmpcpp. Also mpv occasionally. I'm planning on installing SuperCollider at some point too and getting back into that, but that shouldn't be too heavy either.
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Clicks & Cuts Minimal Sounds & One Shots
I would say no there aren't any sample packs for this kind of stuff because this entire scene developed around using a samplers and sampling as well as some computer tools like Max/Msp, SuperCollider, Recycle, Cool Edit Pro and some other stuff I am quite likely forgetting at the moment. Also you might look at some of the IRCAM stuff too.
- Ask HN: What audio/sound-related OSS projects can I contribute to?
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Is there any alternative to sonic pi?
Sonic pi is basically a wrapper for the amazing language Supercollider (https://supercollider.github.io/). I highly recommend watching Eli Fieldsteel's excellent tutorials on it (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yRzsOOiJ_p4&list=PLPYzvS8A_rTaNDweXe6PX4CXSGq4iEWYC) to see some of what its capable of (I think he is almost a finished a new book on it as well).
avendish
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Ask HN: What audio/sound-related OSS projects can I contribute to?
Happy to introduce you to https://ossia.io there are a lots of tasks open! You can check the projects for the general development axes: https://github.com/ossia/score/projects?query=is%3Aopen ; e.g. Audio, Musicality, Integrations, JACK & Linux integration (some are in Classic projects mode) all have audio-related tasks, some easy, some hard.
Creating new Avendish plug-ins (docs: https://celtera.github.io/avendish/) could also be fairly useful, here's a very basic example one: https://github.com/celtera/avendish/blob/main/examples/Advan...
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Learning C++ for Multimedia and Audio programming
If you are interested in making max, pd, etc... extension you can look into https://github.com/celtera/avendish : it's made exactly for this and tries to stay very close from standard C++ unlike most existing audio frameworks which often come with their own bespoke standard library reimplementation. The documentation also tries to explain the c++ features it used, you might find this useful!
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Soursop and Ponies in Kona: A C++ Committee Trip Report
to automatically generate safe dlopen stubs for runtime dynamic library loading from header files
and through the C++ one (this one is an extremely quick and dirty prototype):
https://github.com/ossia/score/blob/master/src/plugins/score...
to pre-instantiate get(aggregate), for_each(aggregate, f) and other similar functions in https://github.com/celtera/avendish because of how slow it is when done through TMP (doing it that way removed literally dozens of megabytes from my .o and had a positive performance impact even with -O3) ; so I weep a lot when I read that people in the committee object to pack...[indexing]
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Cognitive Loads in Programming
I really don't know about this, I'm writing audio & media effects in a fairly declarative style with https://github.com/celtera/avendish and I'm so much more productive that it's not even funny - I can rewrite entire effects from scratch in the time that it used to take me to find a bug somewhere
- Ask HN: Who is using C++ as the main language for new project?
- A framework for audio software development
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Clap: The New Audio Plug-In Standard
For anyone using c++, my declarative system has some amount of support for clap: https://github.com/celtera/avendish / https://celtera.github.io/avendish/
But unlike clap, targetting this also gives direct access to a few other environments, namely Max, Pd, ossia score, with the list hopefully growing.
Here is an example minimal plugin : https://github.com/celtera/avendish/blob/main/examples/Raw/M...
Note that unlike pretty much every other c/c++ plugin API, the plugin code does not need to include any header, everything is done through reflection of struct members at compile-time.
Here's a per-sample noise generator which uses a small library of pre-made ports: https://github.com/celtera/avendish/blob/main/examples/Helpe...
And a very naive buffer-based audio filter : https://github.com/celtera/avendish/blob/main/examples/Helpe...
UI is supported without relying on a specific UI library, only on a canvas painter concept which can then target Qt, NanoVG, and others to come: https://github.com/celtera/avendish/blob/main/examples/Helpe...
since it binds directly to audio APIs at compile time, it has pretty much zero code size in itself, the smallest plugin it generates for VST2 is around 7kb IIRC
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WG21, aka C++ Standard Committee, April 2022 Mailing
I've ported my lib https://github.com/celtera/avendish to P1061's experimental clang implementation to replace boost.pfr (https://github.com/celtera/avendish/blob/main/include/avnd/common/aggregates.hpp#L67) and it works great, it's only missing pack indexing because right now one still needs to do something like
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Why LSP?
Working on a sunset of this with https://github.com/celtera/avendish - C++ reflection makes this very easy
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Unreal vs. Unity Opinion
so interesting, as a mostly C++ dev, UE's C++ style feels absolutely awful aha. Of course they have to be here because c++ used to not have reflection but I think that nowadays one could use similar principles as the ones I've tried to develop for audio / media objects in https://github.com/celtera/avendish to implement game objects / UObject in a much cleaner way and with better compile times
What are some alternatives?
Sonic Pi - Code. Music. Live.
proposal - Go Project Design Documents
faust - Functional programming language for signal processing and sound synthesis
DtBlkFx - Fast-Fourier-Transform (FFT) based VST plug-in
Viper4Android-presets - This repository finds a collection of preset for viper4android 2.7+
csound_max - csound6~ object for Max/MSP
csound - Main repository for Csound
nanobind - nanobind: tiny and efficient C++/Python bindings
pure-data - Pure Data - a free real-time computer music system
DPF - DISTRHO Plugin Framework
glicol - Graph-oriented live coding language and music/audio DSP library written in Rust
clap-imgui - Minimal example of prototyping CLAP audio plugins using Dear ImGui as the user interface.