version 0.1.1 fixes a few bugs: *Fixed bug when not passing in a filename at startup.
*Added COPYING file. Added copyright templates to src files. Fixed About box text. *Fixed some undo/redo problems with drag & drop of events. Editing notes within chords and tuplets still have problems. My announcement for version 0.1.0 didn't seem to make it to the list, so here's a repeat: Yet another music notation program to pollute the internet. It's still just a baby, but it already implements at least a few bugs. It's not really ready for general use yet. The user interface is still rather lacking and there are way too few sanity checks, but it does read and write native *.sqo files (an xml format), and supports a crude and low-quality export to standard MIDI files. The Staff Editor can display standard notation and tablature moderately well, and work is ongoing to produce better percussion staff and chord staff display. Tracks can be nested. Staffs can be grouped. The score format supports multiple simultaneous time signatures. Currently, it's just for display and editing. There's no playback yet. Website: http://sourceforge.net/projects/sqorlatti Download (bzipped source tarball): http://downloads.sourceforge.net/sqorlatti/sqorlatti-0.1.1.tar.bz2 It's written in C++ and uses Qt4. There's no config or anything yet, just Qt project file. So, as an ordinary user: 1. Unpack to a directory of your choice and cd to it. 2. qmake 3. make 4. Install the Sqorlatti.ttf font. It's located in the fonts subdirectory. In KDE you can install it by going to System Settings and clicking through the tabs Computer Administration / Font Installer / Personal Fonts / Add. 5. To run, type ./Sqorlatti [filename] where [filename] is an optional *.sqo file to open. A few example files are in the examples directory. If you open Staff Editor and the staffs looks huge and filled with garbage characters, you forgot to install the font. UserManual.pdf provides a small amount of documentation on how to use the program. It's not all that well developed yet. Developer documentation can be generated using doxygen. Just type doxygen to generate html documentation in the doc directory. You can fiddle with doxyfile if you want to generate documentation in other formats (e.g. latex). -- 7:8 _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.linuxaudio.org/listinfo/linux-audio-dev
