Hey David

I think it's probably an open-source thing as much as anything. There's a lot 
of resources out there for Pd which are freely available. (For a 'getting 
started' guide, I'd recommend the floss manual). It's a bit of a paradox in the 
open-source community that free resources tend to inhibit more traditional 
forms.

Having said that, if someone wants to pay for 'PD for dummies' I'd gladly get 
writing tomorrow. Perhaps an e-mail to the publishers?

Andrew




From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Date: Wed, 18 Aug 2010 09:06:01 +0000
Subject: [PD] pd books...








Hi, 

 

    I recently bought two books on the processing language and I realized there 
were at least 10 books I could have chosen from. As far as I know, pd has only 
two books about itself ("bang" and "loadbang") How come ? Is this only a 
userbase issue? having a pd book like "getting started with processing" would 
be great to get new people to use the language. It should be real beginner 
level, teach you the basic programming skills and show you all you can do... is 
anyone working in that field?

 

D.S 




http://www.flickr.com/photos/schafferdavid/
http://audioblog.arteradio.com/David_Schaffer/

                                          

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