---------------------------------*-text-*--------------------------------- TiMidity -- Experimental MIDI to WAVE converter Copyright (C) 1995 Tuukka Toivonen This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- From version 0.2i, TiMidity can be compiled to run on Win32 platforms such as Windows 95 and Windows NT (tested on Intel), but NOT on Windows 3.1x with Win32s because it doesn't support console mode. Currently it supports only the dumb interface, but a Windows GUI interface is planned (when I have some spare time to fiddle with .RC files...), also it doesn't support pipes (Win32 has named pipes, so when I have time, I will try to implement them). I added a console handler to check for Ctrl-C and Ctrl-Break keys to clean up the audio stuff, so the side effect is that if you break this program when you are writing .WAV files, they will have always the correct lengths into their header and are ready to be played. On a 486DX2 with 8MB of RAM and a Windows Sound System compatible audio board, it plays well in real time at a frequency of 32000 hertz-16bit- mono, or 22050-16bit-stereo most MIDI files, but if you switch to another task while it is playing, the audio output becomes chunky; TiMidity works better on Windows NT than on Windows 95 where it sounds more chunky. *** WOW!!! *** Now I have a Pentium 133 with 32MB of RAM and TiMidity will play almost all files with no problems at 44100Hz-16bit-stereo (CD quality), using around 50% of CPU time, so you can switch tasks without stopping music: just give at least 256 audio buffers; and, with good patches it plays BETTER than my wavetable audio board!!! *** WOW!!! *** ****************************************************************************** New Option -e *** The -e option (evil) works only on Win32 version of TiMidity and increases the TiMidity's task priority by one. It can give better playback when you switch tasks (at least for me it do, remember I have a Pentium 133), but BEWARE that for complex files or slow processors, it can slow all other tasks down. ****************************************************************************** The file TIMIDITY.IDE is the Borland C++ 4.51 project file, and the file TIMIDITY.MAK is the Borland C++ 4.51 makefile. They are set up for a BC++ installation in D:\BC45, so if you have BC++ installed in another directory you must change the paths in the Makefile or in the IDE. With some work, I think, you can compile the code with other products (Microsoft C, Watcom C, etc.), just be sure to define the symbols AU_WIN32, __WIN32__, and include the file win_a.c as the audio driver. Probably, the code in win_a.c needs some more work, notably in the callback function that shouldn't call waveOutUnprepareHeader directly, but it works... Davide Moretti E-mail: dmoretti@iper.net Or send a snailmail or postcard to: Davide Moretti via Neri da Rimini, 28 47037 Rimini, Italy Postcard changes are welcomed...