Le 16/08/2010 14:49, Philipp Überbacher a écrit : > Excerpts from Dieter Plaetinck's message of 2010-08-16 14:26:51 +0200: >> On Mon, 16 Aug 2010 13:53:15 +0200 >> Philipp Überbacher <hollunder@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>> >>> Hi Phil, >>> I tried it, and I think I know now what it does :) >>> >>> You write drum patterns using lilypond. >>> Your script has some way to randomize velocity and volume (with a Tk >>> GUI). >>> It produces pdf and midi files of the lilypond input. >>> It possibly does some other stuff too :) >>> >>> Well, it's nothing I need, but I guess it's good to know what it >>> roughly does :) >>> >>> Regards, >> >> that's what it does? hmm. interesting >> is it compatible with odd measures (7/8, 9/8, 15/16 etc), tempo >> changes, etc? >> >> Dieter > > You can certainly write anything you can imagine with lilypond, so it's > 'compatible' at least in that sense. Hi, Yes, you can write whatever measures you want and even... you can superimpose different time signatures ( it's the meaning of polymetric). You can also use irrational tuplets... etc... If you know how to paste and delete in a text editor you're done. Compile and listen to the Demos 3 and 4, you'd have an idea. To Philipp: If you have an opinion why such a difficulty to understand what's the 'G'igsaw does let me know, i could improve the Tutorials or the description of its capabilities? It will be a benefit for all. Anyway thanks to your feedback. Have fun. Phil. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user