Yes I am familiar with "mod" files which, more precisely, were born in the Amiga world. Generally speaking, they're best at techno songs.
Mine are rather "piano only", classical-like, songs. Those usually sound better with midi sequencers. Dom On Wednesday January 28 2004 15:40, Eric Dantan Rzewnicki wrote: > are you familiar with the tracker paradigm? I've not used it, but I > think you create a .mod that contains both the sounds and the > instructions for when and how to play them. If I understand correctly > this format was born in the gaming world. > > -Eric Rz. > > On Wed, Jan 28, 2004 at 02:51:50PM -0500, Dominic Genest wrote: > > Hello, > > > > I am programming some little games in Linux as a hobby, and I composed > > midi files that I would like to be played in the background. What is the > > easiest way to do this so that it works on all platforms for everyone ? > > > > I would like suggestions of real time synthesizers that can read ".mid" > > files. Does anybody know of any library that just does all the work to > > send wave output to sound cards from a ".mid" file ? Also, I would like > > not to have to supply instrument files. > > > > Thanks a lot for any answer or clue ! > > > > Dom > > > > -- > > Dominic Genest > > ?tudiant 3e cycle > > D?partement d'Informatique et de G?nie Logiciel > > Universit? Laval > > 97010111 -- Dominic Genest �tudiant 3e cycle D�partement d'Informatique et de G�nie Logiciel Universit� Laval 97010111
