[linux-audio-user] FOLKS, PAY ATTENTION TO NOTEEDIT, the score editor!

Rob lau at kudla.org
Wed Dec 21 00:12:57 EST 2005


On Tue December 20 2005 20:22, Emiliano Grilli wrote:
> IMHO there are tasks that are best expressed by "gestures"
> (mouse clicks and acting with icons), and other that are best
> expressed by "words" (command line interface, scripting), and
> I think both approaches are valuable. Having both well
> cooperating is a good thing for me. I don't understand why
> denigrate one over another.

Actually, I *am* a programmer (just one who's not especially good 
at writing stable C++ code), and I wish I could "program" songs 
in a way that made sense to me both as a programmer and as a 
composer.  Something higher level than csound and less Lisp-like 
than nyquist, for example, but which could still talk to all the 
nifty audio stuff like Jack and ALSA synthesizers and MIDI and 
LADSPA filters.  "emacs mysong" (or "kwrite mysong") is always 
gonna be more comfortable to me than a mouse-driven sequencer 
interface, because I live most of my life in it.  I'd like to be 
able to play my song back whenever I want to, or type "make all" 
and get nice big honkin' wav, ogg and mp3 files of it.

However, I recognize that I am not like most musicians.  Since no 
one else here is either, I felt someone needed to stick up for 
them.  So many people seem to wonder why more musicians aren't 
using Linux.... the "use the command line, it's better" 
mentality is one of them.  Most musicians and many recording 
engineers are going to think something's gone horribly wrong if 
they see a command line.

Rob



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