Lilypond can convert midi to lilypond and then also produce midi. Lilypond is mainly what I use. In the past I have exported to musicxml in proprietary programs then used lilypond utilities to convert musicxml into midi. Jeremiah Sent from my Samsung smartphone on AT&T "S. Massy" <lists@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >On Thu, Dec 29, 2011 at 08:39:16AM +0530, Rustom Mody wrote: >> On Thu, Dec 29, 2011 at 1:20 AM, Jeremiah Benham <jjbenham@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx >> > wrote: >> >> > I am not aware of an application that does this. What do you need this for? >> > >> > Jeremiah >> > >> >> I have lots of music typed into nted -- probably 100s of hours of work. >> I need to port this to... well shall we say... more portable applications? >> I like to use linux and nted is a sweet app. >> But to expect my music-buddies to know how to spell "linux", or that OS and >> Windows are not synonymous is faintly ridiculous. For that it looks like >> musescore fits the bill. I work on linux they work on windows (some macs) >> and there are not conflicts when we swap music. >> >> If I could get things out via lilypond or musicxml that would be ideal but >> neither work. >> >> So midi is the only (constricted) pipeline between nted and musescore. >I have no idea how useful/convenient this could be, but have you >considered abc? >http://abc.sf.net > >I believe there are other options out there for converting midi to >textual representation and back, but, once again, I really don't know >how useful any of it would be in this context. > >Cheers, >S.M. _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-user