|
Back when I was young, fresh & popular around these parts, Michael G
mentioned that...
"I will shortly be writing a tutorial introduction to the Silence classes in
CsoundVST, which I will post to the Csound front page as I did the Csound
tutorial. This should make things considerably clearer."
http://www.nabble.com/algorithmic-composition-101-tf2730319.html#a7621033
As I now have a basic working (more or less) Python based sco generating
environment of my own, I feel I'm definately ready to explore Silence & what
it has to offer, in order to:
1) increase my knowledge of more efficient & effective Python coding
practice / program design (my python code looks a lot like my csound code
("it's quite "procedural" looking? is that the right word?), whereas a lot
of other people's python code still looks a lot like gobbledy gook i must
admit. (Stuff littered around in the Csound install paths, & Athena CL for
example..)
2) to expose myself to the functions available within Silence, possibly
thereby avoiding "re-inventing the algorithmic wheel" in many instances &
utilising aspects of Silence in my own "workflow" where possible /
desirable.
So, err, this could have gone direct to Michael I guess, but none the
less...
how's this going Michael, & failing availability of a "tutorial" is there
any kind of "roadmap" available for getting some insight into not only what
silence does, but what bits of silence actually do them, & how it all fits
together?
I know this whole "lack of transparency re using Silence for the
uninitiated" thing crops up periodically, but anyway as the time would
definately be right for me, I thought i'd throw my (admittedly
insignificant) weight behind the demand....
t.
--
View this message in context: http://www.nabble.com/gaining-insight-into-the-Silence-Python-Classes-tf4330048.html#a12332119
Sent from the Csound - General mailing list archive at Nabble.com. |