thanx for listening!! found some stupid bugs while improving the script so weirdness of the soundfile maybe about skill-less-ness of me and: On Wed, Aug 13, 2008 at 01:27:41AM -0400, Anthony Kozar wrote: > Perhaps you would like to tell us more > about the processes that your code uses when composing the score. (eg. what > is the meaning of the various Identity[] elements and Song1.srgmpdn ?) when i was an univ student learned a bit about ecology of plants while researching the ground we used the parameter "coverage" and "density" to compare the data on a list and find out what the potential of the actual ground is like am also not sure what am doing ;-D but wanted to make the parameter used in algo-comping as less as possible and i came up with the idea to only use "freq" "cov" "den" "sa ri ga ma pa da ni" am also a fan of the word "object-oriented" and "fractal" am not good at math so maybe trying to do a fake of those with what i can understand at this moment Song1.srgmpdn is like that cuz i wanted to keep the calc not done until the freq should be spit out to a file even though the relationship of the notes will become so far from the natural ji point of view am sticking to use the int ones when thinking about the algo in the case of song1 am using 7 different ratios to bring out somethang else than octvs and keeping in the list is the int x whick stands for how far the overtone will become this x will be controlled by "den" am putting a lot of meanings in a single parm and because of that also made the value of the parm to be "sa ri ga ma pa da ni" value is also an object and each has a story for its existence ... does it sound eastern? > could > you put version numbers or dates on the .orc, .sco, and .py files too? That > way anyone who decides to study your pieces can recreate each one > individually. from the next episode will do so things over there actually is just a backup of my working dir i like it that way so to keep the dir clean files might go away when it's gone from the list of rss.xml i like the idea of thangs "passing away" > my impression recently has been that there are > more people using Python to write their Csound scores or to create custom > performance software via the Csound API than with any other programming > language. it was too hard for me to understand the py related conversations going on this list but the trend is to do the rt thangs directly from python instead of spitting out an orc&sco? many of my machines still don't behave well when using jack well anyway maybe this non-rt way is nice to me coz my main interest is to produce a soundfile to update the podcast and if am going this way i can work on thangs on most of the pcs existing on this planet thanx to the cs-maintainers!! -- '2+ http://sarigama.namaste.jp/buyobuyo.html