What I'd ***really*** would like to see is how it looks once you do Command-E (i.e. it "unlocks" the patch and all the wires between the objects suddenly appear). Because in a MAX/MSP GUI, the wires between the objects (and some objects too) are hidden when the patch is "locked".
I've seen rather similar developments 2 years ago at Ircam and I still haven't recovered of the Command-E: parts of the patch surface were black because of the wires density!!! These applications are presented here (site in french): http://www.educnet.education.fr/musique/tice/applications/musiclab/index.htm The Windows version has been done with Macromedia Director for the GUI and jMax running without GUI for MIDI processing. The Mac version has been done with Max/MSP. The developement of the Windows version of the 6 applications took about 24 men-months, including porting jMax to Windows, and the development was largely parallel between the GUIs' developpers and the patchs developpers. Just my 2cents about MAX/MSP GUIs... Fran�ois On Thu, 2003-03-20 at 16:04, Dave Griffiths wrote: > The interesting thing with "girl" is that it's programmed in MAX/MSP, there is > an interview with the programmer here: > http://www.creativesynth.com/interviews/PeterNyboer/pn_interview.html > > On Thu, 20 Mar 2003 09:31:25 -0500, Paul Davis wrote > > y'all know i like chrome-y interfaces, and that i like the use of > > color to improve usability. here's one that shows just how > > *BAD* it can get: > > > > http://www.harmony-central.com/Newp/2003/Girl-20-OS-X-lg.gif > > > > >
