Hi there, Lukas Gruetzmacher wrote: > > On Mon, 26 Jul 1999, Matthias Kilian wrote: > > BTW: is there any other hybrid (freeware) tool other than rosegarden > > that offers a graphical editor but uses MusixTeX as backend? I did not > > try rosegarden for some time, but I remeber the results didn't satisfy > > me. > Some weeks ago I wrote to de.comp.text.tex, that I'd begun to write such a > programm. But until today I wrote only a demo of my idea. You can download > it from my homepage (see below). You can add notes in many notelines an > give it to MusiXTeX to see it as DVI. > I would be happy if I found some people who are interested in such a > project - even you are tester or writer of any futher part. > Im using the graphic library Qt. Some days ago I update the most parts of > my code to Qt 2.0 - bit not the whole. So you see some warings while > running. But the main features will no be affected. Last two years I have been working on OpusOne - WYSIWIG OpusTeX editor. Currently it has about 1 MB of C source, supports up to 256 tracks (<= 16 instruments, <= 4 staffs, <= 4 voices), MIDI file I/O, MIDI keyboard input and playback, automatic but adjustable chords, accidentals, beams, slurs, and ties; mixing (channel, bank, patch, mute, solo, controller grouping, 5 user-selectable controllers, smart metronome) and many many more. Target program should be comparable to latest Encore, but much more intelligent and faster to use. It is written for the Amiga, but using an WinUAE emulator it is fairly usable on PC or Linux too. First public beta release will come out probably in September. Happy (Opus)TeXing, Stanislav Kneifl.
