![]() ![]() ![]() It sounded great and you can hear it via this link ![]() The net result is that he was able to complete a large piece of Japanese music called Spring of the Sea, by Michio Miyagi, which had three instrument parts and lasted over five and a half minutes. I also pointed him to the technique of splitting a large program into several buffers, which can be linked together with cue and sync commands. I was able to help him out, explaining why there is a limit on buffer file size (set by the use of UDP protocols to communicate between the GUI, the server and the supercollider scsynth that together make up the Sonic Pi application. This is quite a tedious and time consuming process, even with practice, and so I was very interested a few days ago to come across some work done by Japanese Sonic Pi user Hiroshi TACHIBANA who asked a question about playing long music files in Sonic Pi on the Sonic Pi Google Forum. Fairly frequently I transcribe existing pieces of music from printed scores to produce code that will run in Sonic Pi. ![]()
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