| "float" means 32-bit single-precision floating point numbers for audio samples.
"double" means 64-bit double-precision floating point numbers for audio samples.
My earlier email contains everything I could think of for you to try. I know that other people than I have gotten it to work. As I said, when I get back to town next week I will upgrade my Cubase to your version and test that.
Regards,
Mike
-----Original Message-----
>From: Jim Aikin
>Sent: May 24, 2008 9:05 PM
>To: csound@lists.bath.ac.uk
>Subject: [Csnd] Re: Using CsoundVST in Cubase
>
>I'm still wandering around in the woods here. Hoping Mike G. or someone
>else can help. (My email program doesn't seem to want to quote the
>entire digest message when I hit Reply, so I'm hand-copying quotes here.)
>
>Mike said this: "The sample size information prints when you run Csound
>in the console." And indeed, it says "double samples" when I do that. Of
>course, "double samples" might mean either 32-bit or 64-bit audio. I
>wouldn't know which. Nor am I able to get CsoundVST running in Cubase,
>so I have no way of knowing whether it prefers "double samples" or
>pistachio.
>
>Mike said this: "It turns out it is better to use a MIDI track instead
>of an instrument track for CsoundVST." But since I don't seem to be able
>to access CsoundVST at all in Cubase, the question of what sort of track
>I might prefer is, at the moment, moot.
>
>I have downloaded the CsoundVST.dll. I have placed it both in the
>C:\Program Files\Steinberg\VSTplugins directory and in the D:\Csound\bin
>directory. I have also used the Cubase Plug-In Information dialog box to
>add D:\Csound\bin to the list of directories where plug-ins are to be
>found. When I launch Cubase, I would naively expect CsoundVST to show up
>in the pop-up menu in the VST Instruments window ... but it doesn't.
>
>I have no idea what to try next. Suggestions?
>
>--Jim Aikin
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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