That was a few years after a fellow undergrad student (at a different
university) told me, very lucidly : « Now I understand what is
pseudo-code. It's code that doesn't work » (loosely translated from
French). That's because pseudo-code is designed to be non-runnable.
i thin k YOU
a few little problems with this
Firstly, the flag is -resize, you've put the dash after read. Also there seems
to be a space in your filename, that always makes it tricky to refer to. Also
check capitalization is right. If the underscore's in your file name, it should
be in the tag. so:
[read
type vst~, then the number of inputs and outputs, then the name of the .dll
ex: vst~ 2 2 myreverb.dll
I strongly recommend you to read the help file for vst~ It contains all the
object's methods and you'll need this in order to make it work...
D.S
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Pedro Lopes wrote:
It doesn't make much sense in my head, if I do not need GEM I shouldn't be
forced to install it. I can try installing GEM to see if then pd will not
uninstall pd-extended.
you should exactly _not_ install gem (the puredata
://clk.atdmt.com/UKM/go/195013117/direct/01/; target=_blank
http://clk.atdmt.com/UKM/go/195013117/direct/01/
-- next
part --
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL:
href=http://lists.puredata.info/pipermail/pd-list/attachments/20100524/a14dbd2b/attachment.html;
target
please install puredata, then manually uninstall gem, then install
pd-extended.
should work.
hello IOhannes,
i tried now 2 different ways:
first: i installed puredata with sudo aptitude install -R so gem is not
installed with, automaticly (thats great!)
second: i installed puredata
So, we've tried to do a series of tests using tcpserver/client as well as
netserver/client and found the following:
Using either off-the-shelf wifi hardware or an industrial strength wifi router
(in our case Cisco), we get unexpected lag spikes on local WLAN with 16 clients
at times even