It seems like the preferences window is not fully working yet, now that I test it. It's hard to tell these things, because python doesn't throw the error until you attempt to execute every code path.
If it is ported to gtk2, then I would suggest not distributing gtk/pygtk/gobject with ceres because it will allow the user to easily use the system installed versions+update/fix bugs in libraries. It's the same reason you might use shared libraries vs static libraries. On Thu, May 5, 2011 at 3:40 AM, Kjetil S. Matheussen < [email protected]> wrote: > > Thanks Jeremy, > > All those packages are included to make it simple to compile > on many platforms, not just debian. > > But from your email, it seems like you have ported ceres to gtk2? > Is that really correct? That's a quite big job involving digging > through some horribly written python code. > Are you sure the preferences window works now? > > I'm sorry I don't have time to look at your code right now. > > Best, > Kjetil > > > > On Wed, 4 May 2011, Jeremy Salwen wrote: > > Hi Kjetil: >> >> Thanks a lot! >> >> I had to make a few changes to get it to work on my system. Most >> significantly, it uses gnome/glade/pygtk 1.2, which doesn't work well with >> a >> recent Debian install (Gtk 2 has been released for nearly 10 years). >> >> Also, it includes libraries which are already available on most linux >> systems through a package manager. Thus I've made a few changes: removed >> the libraries except for sndlib (and made it use the system copies of the >> libraries in their place), and updated the pygtk and glade code to gtk2. >> >> If you're interested in incorporating any of these changes into Ceres, you >> can see the changes in a git repository here: >> https://github.com/jeremysalwen/Ceres-Debian >> >> or download the changed package at >> https://github.com/jeremysalwen/Ceres-Debian/tarball/0.57-1 >> >> Jeremy >> >> On Mon, May 2, 2011 at 8:52 AM, Kjetil S. Matheussen < >> [email protected]> wrote: >> >> >>> Jeremy Salwen: >>> >>> >>>> I just recently discovered ceres3: >>>> http://www.music.columbia.edu/~stanko/About_Ceres3.html >>>> >>>> have you heard of it? >>>> >>>> >>>> Ceres is larger and more updated than Ceres3. >>> http://archive.notam02.no/arkiv/src/ceres-0.57.tar.gz >>> (Ceres3 has a few more options for some >>> of the transforms, but lacks lots of other stuff.) >>> >>> >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> Linux-audio-dev mailing list >>> [email protected] >>> http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-dev >>> >>> >>
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