Hello, I was playing with pyalsa and I realized an unexpected behavior with pitchbend events. The pitchbend range should be, by MIDI standard, between -8192 and +8191, or 0-16384. Being a 3 byte event, it should ignore any subsequent byte received. Using pyalsa I'm able to create events with values greater than 127 and they are translated using as many bytes as possible; in fact, if I create a note event with a note value of 8193, I receive a value 1 (using the first byte of a 2 byte value with 7bit format). That's fine, I suppose it's by architecture (I'm not a programmer, I just play around with python, I'm just assuming this). The problem comes with pitchbend values, since it looks like alsa accepts values greater than 8191 and does not ignore the exceeding bytes as it should; that is, I'm able to send 8192, and that's what vkeybd does. The transformation here is the issue, since receiving programs seem to translate only the latest two bytes, that's why vkeybd (and other software too) shouldn't have a 8192 value. That can be confusing, for example, using a2jmidi: the end of the pitchbend scale is suddenly a 0 value; I know that vkeybd is not the ultimate software in music production, but, still, it shouldn't be able to do so, I think :) I don't know if, maybe, there's some less known aspect regarding pitchbend, and, as I mentioned before, I don't know a thing about programming, nor how actually works ALSA under the hood. Anyway, I think there should be some kind of range control, at least with pyalsa, if not by alsa at all. What do you think? Regards, Maurizio -- È difficile avere una convinzione precisa quando si parla delle ragioni del cuore. - "Sostiene Pereira", Antonio Tabucchi http://www.jidesk.net _______________________________________________ Alsa-devel mailing list Alsa-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://mailman.alsa-project.org/mailman/listinfo/alsa-devel