Ralf wrote: > I might be arrogant, but Google search yourself and you will
> see, C and
> C++ is most common for Linux. There are some dinosaurs that re-program
> shell commands by using assembler, because they also not fine with that
> "evil" C and C++ compilers and the findings that Linux C compilers does.


To Google is a good advice and not arrogant imho, and I actually already
started learning C++
sometime ago :) Thanks for the sharing of motivating experiences ;-)



Dave wrote: >The CLAM you want is here:
>
>   http://clam.iua.upf.edu/
>
> FAUST is here:
>
>   http://faust.grame.fr/
>
> You might also want to check out Albert Graef's Q project:
>
>   http://q-lang.sourceforge.net/


mm, Q-Faust, Q-Midi, Q-Synth, Qt/Q , these look like cool tools too..

>
> Best,
>
> dp
>

Thanks for the links and all replies, I'll look at them all when I find the
time,
it's become quit a list already.
I might stick to moving on with C++ first for a while :)

here are some of my bookmarks I'll share for any other newbie who's
interested in the subject:
http://www.cplusplus.com/doc/tutorial/
MIDI PROGRAMMING IN
LINUX<http://ccrma.stanford.edu/%7Ecraig/articles/linuxmidi/>
LV2 programming for the complete idiot<http://ll-plugins.nongnu.org/lv2pftci/>
http://www.cprogramming.com/tutorial.html#c++tutorial
http://www2.its.strath.ac.uk/courses/c/
Pure Data Introduction for
Ubuntu<https://help.ubuntu.com/community/HowToPureDataIntroduction>
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