David Bolton-2, thank you for feedback. Sorry for the late answer, I saw your post just now. Dind't know that there is no notification on topic reply... Now I know
1. About MIDI panel height. Yes, strange thing with zero height - I set minimum height of it to 150. But when I enlarge it manually the issue didn't repeat. So I don't know yet how to solve this, some piece of advice could be helpful . 2. MIDI panel appears now on import or open recent MIDI file event. About file picker. The current idea is: - user opens midi file - file is imported as is - without operations on its tracks - after that user can apply different operations or unmark some tracks and push Import button to update import result and see the immediate difference - user may want to import different file and pick it through the Browse button - here it is - and repeat the set of operations, then press Import If this solution is not a good one and it's better to show this panel only during one single import - please tell me about, and I'll rebuild the ui. On minor issues. I agree, it's better to shrink the page view and leave navigator height the same - or place MIDI panel in the bottom dock section. Close button - I'll try the Edit->Find close icon. By the way - which one looks better in your opinion? Instruments - yeah, very often there is no instrument defined for the track. There is a function in midi/midiinstrument.cpp that returns unknown if midi track type is MT_UNKNOWN = 0. Maybe set the track instrument to Grand Piano in that case or ignore midi type? Split point for LH/RH - I think to include fixed split point separation ability as well as LH/RH "smart" option - and put all of it on MIDI panel, so user will have a choice. "where the quantization settings would go" - could you please explain this thought, sorry, didn't understand? -- View this message in context: http://dev-list.musescore.org/A-GUI-panel-for-MIDI-import-tp7578066p7578077.html Sent from the MuseScore Developer mailing list archive at Nabble.com. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Learn Graph Databases - Download FREE O'Reilly Book "Graph Databases" is the definitive new guide to graph databases and their applications. This 200-page book is written by three acclaimed leaders in the field. The early access version is available now. Download your free book today! http://p.sf.net/sfu/neotech_d2d_may _______________________________________________ Mscore-developer mailing list [email protected] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/mscore-developer
