Hi. FreeDots (http://delysid.org/freedots.html) is a tool to work with MusicXML files for blind users. It can "translate" MusicXML files to braille music notation, play the score via MIDI and also features an interactive (BrlAPI based) mode for viewing MusicXML score files and interactively selecting individual braille music symbols for playback (with cursor routing keys). This is basically an update to my initial announcement on this list. FreeDots is still in prototyping stage, and some well known braille music conventions like note groupings and music written on two (or more) staves are still not supported. But there are things that do already work quite well. In fact, I have started to use FreeDots for two of instruments I play (flute and guitar) already and it has prooven very useful. What I find particularily useful (and what I always miss when reading printed braille music) is the ability to just "click" on a braille music symbol and be able to listen to it. In FreeDots, you can interactively playbacka a whole system, a measure or the individual notes. This is very useful for learning to read braille music and it makes the learning curve feel must less anoying. What does work: * Music on one staff, possibly several parts (choral music, guitar, all sorts of monophnoic instruments like flute, sax and so on) * Chords (currently not clef sensitive, intervals are always upward). * Slur marks (no doubling support yet). * Fingerings (if correctly encoded in MusicXML). * Articulation marks like accent, staccato, tenuto and the like. What doesn't work: * Parts with more then one staff (actually, they are there, but not formatted correctly, so its mostly a cosmetic issue). This mostly concerns keyboard music. * Note grouping. I have an idea on how to implement it, but I need to settle the multiple staff issue first. * Harmony and figured-bass. This is a feature I'd like to have at some point, but it is not very high on my priority list. * Lyrics. In fact, the lyric get parsed and displayed, but there needs to be some formatting logic written to make things nice and clean. This would be especially desireable because of sites like www.wikifonia.org. They have a large collection of lead-sheets in MusicXML format for download. * Many other special rules of braille music which I ignored for simplicity for now or which I don't even know yet! FreeDots is written in Python. Apart from some utility modules for doing MIDI file output and rational numbers, the code base currently consists of roughly 1300 lines of code: 60 freedots/frontend.py 87 freedots/playback.py 125 freedots/viewer.py 274 freedots/musicxml.py 310 freedots/braillemusic.py 432 freedots/music.py If you have knowledge about braille music (or you want to learn it) and you are looking for a Free Software project to contribute to, don't look further! :-) While I've been able to make pretty much progress in a relatively short amount of time, the overall task of writing a complete braille music formatting program is pretty huge. To succeed, we will need people that sit down and help us implement their favourite pet braille music feature. If you are a piano player with programming know-how, you might as well send me a patch for multi-staff music. If you are a programmer with no music background at all, you can still review the (probably very ugly) code and send suggestions on how to improve things. This will help in the long run. Anyway, I think you get the idea. I need help! :-) URL: http://delysid.org/freedots.html -- CYa, ⡍⠁⠗⠊⠕ | Debian Developer <URL:http://debian.org/> .''`. | Get my public key via finger mlang@xxxxxxxxxxxxx : :' : | 1024D/7FC1A0854909BCCDBE6C102DDFFC022A6B113E44 `. `' `- <URL:http://delysid.org/> <URL:http://www.staff.tugraz.at/mlang/> _______________________________________________ Blinux-list mailing list Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list