Greetings: The "sequencer" aspect of TiMidity refers to its ability to function as an ALSA sequencer client. I sometimes think that the choice of the term "sequencer" is misleading to those of us who understand a sequencer as a MIDI recorder. That is *not* what the ALSA sequencer interface is, it's really more of a "subscriber" that allows and manages multiple connections between the clients who "subscribe" to the API (bad description, I know, but it's all I can come up with right now). TiMidity does read MIDI files, of course, and it can also be compiled to function as an ALSA sequencer client. Hence the confusion regarding its capabilities... Btw, Emilio mentioned Sted2, a rather interesting MIDI sequencing environment with an ncurses interface, but if licensing and source availability is not an issue there's also the now-freeware Sequencer Plus Gold from Voyetra. DOSemu handles it (and the Voyetra drivers) beautifully. I'd like to see if DOSemu will work as well with the DOS version of Cakewalk, but I don't own a copy and can't find it anywhere. Both SPG and Cakewalk use ANSI graphics for their interfaces, so I can use SPG from either the console or from an xterm. Best regards, dp Eric Dantan Rzewnicki wrote: >On Tue, Oct 05, 2004 at 04:39:06PM -0400, Brett W. McCoy wrote: > > >>>>What something Timidity++ -- it uses a variety of interfaces, including >>>>ncurses, slang, GTK+, etc. >>>> >>>> >>>Does timidity do sequencing? I always thought of it as a softsynth ... >>> >>> >>Yeah, that's true... it's a softsynth with a built-in sequencer... never >>mind. >> >> > >So, is that builtin sequencer only capable of reading midi files? or >does it have an interface for editing them as well? > >-Eric Rz. > > >