vst3sdk
elementary
vst3sdk | elementary | |
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7 | 10 | |
1,532 | 433 | |
1.2% | - | |
4.3 | 2.0 | |
11 days ago | 12 months ago | |
CMake | Shell | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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vst3sdk
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Swift Achieved Dynamic Linking Where Rust Couldn't
But you don't have only Linux, you have (and probably first) OSX and/or Windows and then Linux, and you need an API that works well in that case. Being an in-process dll/so plugin, while fraught with perils gets you to avoid other issues (state, health, restart, identity, etc.)
Also sometimes you don't have a choice, but have to make a dll, for example:
https://github.com/steinbergmedia/vst3sdk or https://ae-plugins.docsforadobe.dev/ and many others. Sometimes it's the only viable choice.
(I wish most have used grpc/flatbuffers/whatever to communicate, but then every RPC call have to be checked/retried/handled, and or shared memory well handled, with (?) locks, etc. - not a trivial thing for someone who is deeply specialized in making a very good effect/renderer/etc instead of dealing with this extra complexity on top).
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is it possible to write a DAW (digital audio workstation) or VSTs with Nim? any audio software, in general
Yeah, you can use nordaudio which wraps PortAudio which has support for every major audio back-end. As for writing a VST you may have to find a way to wrap or interface with Steinberg's SDK. MIDI support is possible by using an RtMIDI wrapper, which I haven't linked because there are a few of them out there of varying quality and I don't know which is best because I just use ALSA directly for my purposes.
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How hard is it to make a VST plugin? Whether a instrument or effect.
You can read the VST3 SDK manual for yourself here https://steinbergmedia.github.io/vst3\_doc/vstsdk/index.html and access the source here: https://github.com/steinbergmedia/vst3sdk.
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Elementary Audio: a modern platform for writing high performance audio software
You have to use the steinberger SDK to make a vst
https://github.com/steinbergmedia/vst3sdk
But audio plugins come in many formats.
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Is there a way to compile windows programs on linux?
https://github.com/steinbergmedia/vst3sdk#build-the-examples-on-linux
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Question for programmers in this group: how do you incorporate programming in music and the other way around?
You can do VST3 as GPL. They dual license it. Lots of legalese to read but definitely an option. https://github.com/steinbergmedia/vst3sdk/issues
elementary
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New chord progression generator website— It is both an excellent ear trainer, and tool for musical inspiration and harmonic experimentation!
I don't know which library you're using, but I use Elementary Audio for my audio projects. This looks like a great fit.
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I'm a beginner audio programmer, can you suggest books to learn DSP with javascript or in alternative agnostic from any language?
Well I m a js dev in life, I recently discovered this library https://www.elementary.audio/, which at first stable release does a pretty good job, I did little experiments and it seems pretty promising
- Elementary Audio: a modern platform for writing high performance audio software
- Elementary - a modern platform for writing high performance audio software that helps you build quickly and ship confidently (they just hit v1.0.0)
- Finally, write audio apps in JavaScript
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Is anyone else astonished at how we now have full-fledged Photo Editors and Word Processors on the web?
And check out this new native audio implementation with JS !!! https://www.elementary.audio/
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Ask HN: Introduction to Analog Synthesizers (Simulation OK)
Great recommendations in here, and I'm happy to see this thread getting such attention!
This is totally a shameless self-plug, but I think it could be interesting for you:
I'm working on a project called Elementary Audio [1] which is a javascript runtime + framework for writing native audio software. It's like the Web Audio API in that it's javascript+audio, but unlike Web Audio in that it aims to target true native audio apps, like plugins for your DAW or hardware projects.
The API that it offers feels to me very much like thinking and working in analog synths, which is why I think you might find it interesting. You can describe and wire up signals and just see what they sound like without having to worry about what needs to happen under the hood for you to hear it.
I put together a guide for dipping your toes into making sound [2] and you'll find there a bunch of other resources that I recommend for getting into the topic.
I should note too that it's currently in beta and only supports macos and linux (windows coming soon!)
[1]: https://www.elementary.audio/
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Functional, Declarative Audio Applications
Funny you should say that :) I'm currently building a small drum synth, will share it as soon as its ready.
In the mean time, check out https://github.com/nick-thompson/elementary for some examples that you can `npm install && npm start` to hear
What are some alternatives?
iPlug2 - C++ Audio Plug-in Framework for desktop, mobile and web
react-juce - Write cross-platform native apps with React.js and JUCE
tiddlywiki-docker - Tools for running TiddlyWiki via a Docker container
JUCE - JUCE is an open-source cross-platform C++ application framework for desktop and mobile applications, including VST, VST3, AU, AUv3, LV2 and AAX audio plug-ins.
Rack - The virtual Eurorack studio
wasgen - Web Audio sound generator
faust - Functional programming language for signal processing and sound synthesis
ARA_SDK - Umbrella installer for all ARA SDK submodules
awesome-musicdsp - A curated list of my favourite music DSP and audio programming resources
fundsp - Library for audio processing and synthesis