loris-announce Mailing List for Loris (Page 2)
C++ class library for sound analysis, synthesis, and morphing
Brought to you by:
kfitz
You can subscribe to this list here.
2000 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
(2) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2001 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
(1) |
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
(3) |
Nov
|
Dec
(1) |
2002 |
Jan
|
Feb
(1) |
Mar
|
Apr
(2) |
May
|
Jun
(1) |
Jul
(2) |
Aug
(2) |
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
2003 |
Jan
(1) |
Feb
|
Mar
(1) |
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
(1) |
Nov
|
Dec
|
2004 |
Jan
|
Feb
(2) |
Mar
(2) |
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
(1) |
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
2005 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
(1) |
Dec
(2) |
2006 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
(4) |
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
(3) |
Aug
(2) |
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
(5) |
2007 |
Jan
(2) |
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
(1) |
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
(1) |
Oct
(3) |
Nov
|
Dec
|
2008 |
Jan
(1) |
Feb
|
Mar
|
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
2009 |
Jan
|
Feb
|
Mar
(2) |
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
|
Sep
(1) |
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
2010 |
Jan
(2) |
Feb
(1) |
Mar
(1) |
Apr
|
May
|
Jun
|
Jul
|
Aug
(1) |
Sep
|
Oct
|
Nov
|
Dec
|
From: Kelly F. <kf...@us...> - 2006-07-22 17:58:18
|
Loris 1.4 has been released. This is Loris 1.4. Loris 1.4 offers bug fixes and new features, relative to Loris 1.3, and is recommended for all Loris users. Some of the changes in Loris 1.4 are incompatible with older Loris versions, and may require changes to existing program code. Loris is an open source C++ class library implementing analysis, manipulation, and synthesis of digitized sounds using the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Sound Model. Loris includes the Loris C++ class library, a c-linkable procedural interface, a scripting interface built using SWIG (www.swig.org), and documentation. For more information about Loris and the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Model, contact the developers at lo...@ce..., or visit them at http://www.cerlsoundgroup.org/Loris/. The primary distribution point for Loris is SourceForge (http://loris.sourceforge.net) and its mirrors. Loris is free software. Please see the file COPYING for details. For documentation, please see the files in the doc subdirectory. For a list of major changes to Loris, organized by release number, please see the file NEWS. |
From: Chris H. <hin...@co...> - 2006-04-27 16:30:05
|
Hi, I am actually working on something called Fossa, a QT 3.3 application that visualizes Loris, and currently allows morphs. Fossa was originally Susanne Lefvert's Masters project, but she left, so now it's my Masters project. I am almost done implementing stretch (dilate) functionality, which also utilizes Loris. Fossa can open SDIF and AIFF files, scale the amplitude, frequency or bandwidth of a sound by a scalar value, and it plots the sounds as a graph of amplitude, frequency or bandwidth of the partials over time. Supposedly QT works under Mac OS X, but so far I haven't succeeded in getting Fossa to work. I have gotten it to work in Linux (Fedora Core 4), though. Fossa is still under development, so I wouldn't call it a beta application just yet, but it should build and run. One of the things I still need to do is to upgrade it to QT 4, though I think that should be fairly straight-forward. You can download the current development build at cvs.sourceforge.net/ cvsroot/loris with CVS. You may also be able to download it via HTTP, but I haven't tried that. Chris H. On Apr 26, 2006, at 11:10 PM, Jaeho Chang wrote: > Hi all ! > I just joined this list. > > I'm wondering if there is any project for developing GUI > application (PC or Mac) based on Loris. > > Since many composers including me loved Lemur on Mac OS 9 very > much, it is a pity that we can not have it on Mac OS X. > If there is no such project, I and my students are interested in > developing one. > > Any comments? > > Jaeho Chang |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@ce...> - 2006-04-27 16:21:22
|
> My intention was to create a tool that would allow arbitrary graphical > editing of RBEP/RBEL SDIF files as well as providing GUI access to > more > structured functions (stretches, morphs etc.). You should also have a look at the Fossa project (under Loris). Chris Hinrichs is currently working on updating and reviving that QT-based editor for Loris SDIF files. In its original form, it did provide some of the capability you describe. It might be a good starting point. Michael Klingbeil's SPEAR program is a nice OS X partial editor that can read RBEP files, but I don't know whether it preserves them properly, the data might be mangled slightly when you export it again. It is worth looking at though. He has some clever algorithms for making the display responsive, and they are published in at least one ICMC paper. It is possible that he might be interested in providing more comprehensive support for Loris data. -kel --------------------------------------------------------------- Kelly Fitz CERL Sound Group kf...@ce... www.cerlsoundgroup.org/Kelly/ |
From: Stuart Y. <st...@ou...> - 2006-04-27 07:34:17
|
Hi Jaeho Chang said: > I'm wondering if there is any project for developing GUI application > (PC or Mac) based on Loris. I did a fair amount of work on one for OS X (Cocoa/Objective-C++) last year as part of a final year project at university, but I'm struggling to find time to work on it now and its far from being finished. My intention was to create a tool that would allow arbitrary graphical editing of RBEP/RBEL SDIF files as well as providing GUI access to more structured functions (stretches, morphs etc.). At the moment simple stuff like import/export/save is working, as is fairly good OpenGL visualisation (2D as yet ;-), and graphical select and delete mechanisms. The more complex editing bits are 'in progress' but may need some redesign as development became a bit haphazard around the time of my finals last year. If there was interest, I might be able to get it to a stage where there was GUI access to the main Loris functions, plus visualisation and the graphical editing stuff that is already in place, and make an alpha release... If anyone is interested in helping with the development and willing to work with my (probably rather dodgy) code/design then I would be very interested to hear from them! I don't think there's a loris-users list, but if anyone is interested in discussing this more then maybe we can go off-list or I can set up a SF project and mailing list for the new app... -Stuart Stuart Yarrow ----------------------------- Subcity Radio - http://www.subcity.org/ http://fingamidi.sourceforge.net/ |
From: Jaeho C. <tr...@tr...> - 2006-04-27 04:10:30
|
Hi all ! I just joined this list. I'm wondering if there is any project for developing GUI application (PC or Mac) based on Loris. Since many composers including me loved Lemur on Mac OS 9 very much, it is a pity that we can not have it on Mac OS X. If there is no such project, I and my students are interested in developing one. Any comments? Jaeho Chang |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@ce...> - 2005-12-18 17:24:58
|
Hi Darek, The problem is that the loris module was installed in a directory that is not in your default PYTHONPATH. Unless you specified a different prefix when you ran configure, it was probably installed in /usr/local/lib/pythonx.x/site-packages, where x.x is the python version. If you look at sys.path, you will probably not find that directory in there (though you will very likely find /usr/lib/ ythonx.x/site-packages). Anyway, the solution is to add the /usr/local site-packages directory to your PYTHONPATH environment variable. Either setenv PYTHONPATH /usr/local/lib/pythonx.x/site-packages for csh or a derivative, of export PYTHONPATH=/usr/local/lib/pythonx.x/site-packages (I think) for bash. Hope that helps, -kel On Dec 17, 2005, at 4:13 PM, Darek wrote: > Hello, > > First of all, thank you for developing and updating this nice > software. > Since long time I was trying to compile old versions of Loris, > hearing examples of exceptional quality sound manipulation, wanted > to use it in my own compositions... and I always failed. :( > But today Loris version 1.3 compiled on Fedora Core 3 Gnu/Linux > without errors! > However trying to run "python morphtest.py" I got: > ---------------------------------------------------- > Welcome to the very simple Loris morphing test! > Kelly Fitz 2000 > > Generates a simple linear morph between a > clarinet and a flute using the Loris > extension module for Python. > > Traceback (most recent call last): > File "/loris-1.3.0/test/morphtest.py", line 44, in ? > import loris, os, time > ImportError: No module named loris > ---------------------------------------------------- > > Strange thing is, when I use command "make check" I end up with > Loris C++ API test generating the best morph I ever heard :) > between a clarinet and a flute ending with "All 9 tests passed" and > everything looks fine. > > What's the right way to start Loris test? > > > Darek > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This SF.net email is sponsored by: Splunk Inc. Do you grep through > log files > for problems? Stop! Download the new AJAX search engine that makes > searching your log files as easy as surfing the web. DOWNLOAD > SPLUNK! > http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=7637&alloc_id=16865&op=click > _______________________________________________ > Loris-announce mailing list > Lor...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/loris-announce Kelly Fitz School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Washington State University kf...@ee... |
From: Darek <da...@o2...> - 2005-12-18 00:13:38
|
Hello, First of all, thank you for developing and updating this nice software. Since long time I was trying to compile old versions of Loris, hearing examples of exceptional quality sound manipulation, wanted to use it in my own compositions... and I always failed. :( But today Loris version 1.3 compiled on Fedora Core 3 Gnu/Linux without errors! However trying to run "python morphtest.py" I got: ---------------------------------------------------- Welcome to the very simple Loris morphing test! Kelly Fitz 2000 Generates a simple linear morph between a clarinet and a flute using the Loris extension module for Python. Traceback (most recent call last): File "/loris-1.3.0/test/morphtest.py", line 44, in ? import loris, os, time ImportError: No module named loris ---------------------------------------------------- Strange thing is, when I use command "make check" I end up with Loris C++ API test generating the best morph I ever heard :) between a clarinet and a flute ending with "All 9 tests passed" and everything looks fine. What's the right way to start Loris test? Darek |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@us...> - 2005-11-09 21:26:51
|
Loris 1.3 has been released. This is Loris 1.3. Loris 1.3 offers significant bug fixes and new features, relative to Loris 1.2, and is recommended for all Loris users. New and up-to-date documentation is provided for the C++ API and the Python module. Command line utilties for analysis, dilation, and synthesis are now available. Dynamically-loading Csound opcode modules are built automatically using the GNU autobuild tools. Some of the changes in Loris 1.3 are incompatible with older Loris versions, and may require changes to existing program code. Loris is an open source C++ class library implementing analysis, manipulation, and synthesis of digitized sounds using the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Sound Model. Loris includes the Loris C++ class library, a c-linkable procedural interface, a scripting interface built using SWIG (www.swig.org), and documentation. For more information about Loris and the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Model, contact the developers at lo...@ce..., or visit them at http://www.cerlsoundgroup.org/Loris/. The primary distribution point for Loris is SourceForge (http://loris.sourceforge.net) and its mirrors. Loris is free software. Please see the file COPYING for details. For documentation, please see the files in the doc subdirectory. For a list of major changes to Loris, organized by release number, please see the file NEWS. |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@us...> - 2004-08-02 23:52:14
|
Loris 1.2 has been released. This is Loris 1.2. Loris 1.2 is a feature update to Loris 1.1. Loris 1.2 includes a consistent interface to AIFF, SDIF, and SPC files through the corresponding classes, including AIFF-style markers. Loris is now compatible with FFTW version 3. Loris no longer depends on the SDIF library from IRCAM. Utility programs have been added to the Loris distribution, including a program to perform the basic analysis and store the Partials in a SDIF file. Regrettablly, the documentation is still catching up, and will not be up to date until the next release, but these significant new features seem to warrant early release. Loris is an open source C++ class library implementing analysis, manipulation, and synthesis of digitized sounds using the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Sound Model. Loris includes the Loris C++ class library, a c-linkable procedural interface, a scripting interface built using SWIG (www.swig.org), and documentation. For more information about Loris and the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Model, contact the developers at lo...@ce..., or visit them at http://www.cerlsoundgroup.org/Loris/. The primary distribution point for Loris is SourceForge (http://loris.sourceforge.net) and its mirrors. Loris is free software. Please see the file COPYING for details. For documentation, please see the files in the doc subdirectory. For a list of major changes to Loris, organized by release number, please see the file NEWS. |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@ce...> - 2004-03-13 00:20:29
|
On Mar 12, 2004, at 4:09 PM, Kurtiss Hare wrote: > 1) My ideal platform would be Visual C++ .NET That has been accomplished. I don't use microsoft things, so I can't tell you how to do it, but I have it on good authority that recent versions of .NET are reasonably compliant with the C++ standard and compile Loris without any problem. I can't say what's involved in getting those other two to work, but I am sure that both are available under windoze. > 2) I tried my Linux box -- I didn't find it documented anywhere, but > Loris 1.1 requires FFTW 2.x, not the most recent version (3.x). Sorry, FFTW3 didn't exist when I wrote up the documentation. I will support FFTW3 in the near future. > Now for a simple Loris program: > > [CODE] > #include "loris.h" > #include "loris/AiffFile.h" > using namespace Loris; > > int main() { > AiffFile sndFile("x.aiff"); > return 0; > } > [/CODE] > > ~/dev/loris> g++ loristest.cpp > /tmp/ccfTtusx.o(.text+0x78): In function `main': > : undefined reference to > `Loris::AiffFile::AiffFile[in-charge](std::basic_string<char, > std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> > const&)' > collect2: ld returned 1 exit status > > For some reason, g++ is not picking up the function definition for the > AiffFile constructor. No, because you didn't link the loris library. In C++, unlike, say, Java, you need more than just the header file. The header file tells you classes and functions exist, but doesn't provide their implementations. The implementations are in the loris library. Try: g++ loristest.cpp -lloris -kel Kelly Fitz School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Washington State University kf...@ee... |
From: Kurtiss H. <kr...@ne...> - 2004-03-13 00:09:35
|
All, I recently wrote about implementing a genetic algorithm on sound files using Loris as a manipulation tool. From what I've seen in the test programs, this seems to be an ideal environment in which to work. However, I've had significant trouble getting Loris to compile and install correctly. I'm confident that the tool is a good one, which is why I'm prepared to invest some time in getting it installed. 1) My ideal platform would be Visual C++ .NET so that I could do the GUI in C#, but I took a quick look at the dependencies (FFTW and SDIF) and saw the trouble others had just getting those to compile correctly--including code hacks for FFTW, and if there's one thing I want to avoid, it's the math involved in Fourier transforms. 2) I tried my Linux box -- I didn't find it documented anywhere, but Loris 1.1 requires FFTW 2.x, not the most recent version (3.x). Got that compiled and installed. Also got the SDIF package compiled/installed. Finally installed and compiled Loris correctly. /usr/local/include looks like it's got everything installed that I should need. Now for a simple Loris program: [CODE] #include "loris.h" #include "loris/AiffFile.h" using namespace Loris; int main() { AiffFile sndFile("x.aiff"); return 0; } [/CODE] ~/dev/loris> g++ loristest.cpp /tmp/ccfTtusx.o(.text+0x78): In function `main': : undefined reference to `Loris::AiffFile::AiffFile[in-charge](std::basic_string<char, std::char_traits<char>, std::allocator<char> > const&)' collect2: ld returned 1 exit status For some reason, g++ is not picking up the function definition for the AiffFile constructor. Perhaps I'm doing something very basic wrong, or I need to cross-link to certain libraries while compiling? Any help in either area 1 or 2 would be greatly appreciated! Thanks! /k <ku...@ku...> |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@ee...> - 2004-02-26 17:32:19
|
Sure you can do this easily with the C++ API, or any of the scripting language interfaces that you can build with SWIG. The source for the python and Tcl modules is distributed with Loris, and can be built without using SWIG. A Perl module can also be built with source that is part of the Loris distribution, but that module hasn't received extensive testing, since I am not a Perl user. Partial is an object in Loris, and you can make one from scratch. Breakpoint is also an object (representing frequency, amplitude, bandwidth, and phase) and you can make those too. And you can add Breakpoints to Partials using the insertBreakpoint method of the Partial class. Check out the documentation, which is posted on sourceforge, and is also part of the Loris distribution. -kel On Feb 25, 2004, at 6:31 PM, Kurtiss Hare wrote: > All, > > I'm looking to create a fairly simple program which combines elements > of one sound with another using genetic algorithms. As far as I have > delved into Loris, I will be able to analyze "partials" from a sound > clip, which can then be individually morphed, etc. My question is: > Can I set these partials manually and then resynthesize the sound? In > order for the algorithm to work correctly, I need to format the > partials as a string of bits, and then randomly replace bits from one > 'transformed partial' with another, then transfigure them back into a > Loris recognizable partial, then resynthesize. I was wondering if > this was possible, or if I can only do pure morphing (between two > sounds) with Loris. > > Thanks, > > /k > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > SF.Net is sponsored by: Speed Start Your Linux Apps Now. > Build and deploy apps & Web services for Linux with > a free DVD software kit from IBM. Click Now! > http://ads.osdn.com/?ad_id=1356&alloc_id=3438&op=click > _______________________________________________ > Loris-announce mailing list > Lor...@li... > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/loris-announce > Kelly Fitz School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Washington State University kf...@ee... |
From: Kurtiss H. <kur...@ca...> - 2004-02-26 02:41:31
|
All, I'm looking to create a fairly simple program which combines elements of one sound with another using genetic algorithms. As far as I have delved into Loris, I will be able to analyze "partials" from a sound clip, which can then be individually morphed, etc. My question is: Can I set these partials manually and then resynthesize the sound? In order for the algorithm to work correctly, I need to format the partials as a string of bits, and then randomly replace bits from one 'transformed partial' with another, then transfigure them back into a Loris recognizable partial, then resynthesize. I was wondering if this was possible, or if I can only do pure morphing (between two sounds) with Loris. Thanks, /k |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@sc...> - 2003-10-27 21:21:25
|
The CVS tree for the Loris project at SourceForge has been modified. If you are using CVS to track Loris development, then you should check out a fresh version of the entire Loris module, and through away your old working directory. In addition to some structural changes (e.g. all library source is in a single src directory), all C++ source files have had their suffix changed to .C, which should improve compatbility with some compilers and IDEs that did not recognize the .c++ suffix we used to employ. |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@us...> - 2003-03-13 21:15:11
|
This is Loris 1.0.2, a compatibility update to Loris 1.0.1. Loris 1.0.2 includes improved auto-configuration using the GNU autotools and greater compatibility with .NET. The distillation operation now reduces the representation of unlabeled Partials using a "collating" process, described in the documenation, and in the file NEWS. Loris is an open source C++ class library implementing analysis, manipulation, and synthesis of digitized sounds using the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Sound Model. Loris includes the Loris C++ class library, a c-linkable procedural interface, a scripting interface built using SWIG (www.swig.org), and documentation. For more information about Loris and the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Model, contact the developers at lo...@ce..., or visit them at http://www.cerlsoundgroup.org/Loris/. The primary distribution point for Loris is SourceForge (http://loris.sourceforge.net) and its mirrors. Loris is free software. Please see the file COPYING for details. For documentation, please see the files in the doc subdirectory. For a list of major changes to Loris, organized by release number, please see the file NEWS. |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@ee...> - 2003-01-10 19:08:38
|
This is Loris 1.0.1, a minor update to Loris 1.0 (and Loris 1.0a). Loris 1.0.1 includes the source for building the Loris Csound module, and fixes many small programming errors that prevented Loris from building with newer, more standard-compliant C++ compilers (such as g++ version 3). The project files and support for building Loris under old versions of MacOS (pre-X) has also been removed, since it seemed rarely to work and has been very difficult to maintain. See the README document for hints on building Loris under MacOS. A more extensive document will be forthcoming. Loris is an open source C++ class library implementing analysis, manipulation, and synthesis of digitized sounds using the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Sound Model. Loris includes the Loris C++ class library, a c-linkable procedural interface, a scripting interface built using SWIG (www.swig.org), and documentation. For more information about Loris and the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Model, contact the developers at lo...@ce..., or visit them at http://www.cerlsoundgroup.org/Loris/. The primary distribution point for Loris is SourceForge (http://loris.sourceforge.net) and its mirrors. Loris is free software. Please see the file COPYING for details. For documentation, please see the files in the doc subdirectory. For a list of major changes to Loris, organized by release number, please see the file NEWS. Kelly Fitz School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Washington State University kf...@ee... |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@us...> - 2002-08-27 17:32:43
|
Fossa has been updated to be compatible with the recent release of Loris 1.0a. Fossa is a graphical control application for analysis, manipulation, and synthesis of sound based on functionalities found in the Loris class library. It provides a graphical interface for morphing of two sounds as well as preparing operations for sound morphing, such as channelization and distillation. Reassigned bandwidth-enhanced analysis data is visually represented and results from different sound manipulations can also be audited. Fossa requires the QT library, as well as Loris. Fossa is free software developed by Susanne Lefvert. |
From: NJCross <kc...@li...> - 2002-08-23 22:14:08
|
Hello.I'm trying to compile Loris-1.0beta9 on a Powerbook G3 running YDL2.2 but each time I get the following error message. I've tried IRCAM's sdif3.2Linux and 3.4. I've found and deleted the stray '\' in the file but I still can't compile. Could anyone help? cheers, Keith [root@localhost loris-1.0beta9]# make make all-recursive make[1]: Entering directory `/root/loris-1.0beta9' Making all in doc make[2]: Entering directory `/root/loris-1.0beta9/doc' make[2]: Nothing to be done for `all'. make[2]: Leaving directory `/root/loris-1.0beta9/doc' Making all in classes make[2]: Entering directory `/root/loris-1.0beta9/classes' /bin/sh ../libtool --mode=compile g++ -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I. -I.. -g -O2 -c SdifFile.c++ rm -f .libs/SdifFile.lo g++ -DHAVE_CONFIG_H -I. -I. -I.. -g -O2 -c SdifFile.c++ -fPIC -DPIC -o .libs/SdifFile.lo SdifFile.c++:101: parse error before `do' SdifFile.c++:101: stray '\' in program SdifFile.c++:102: stray '\' in program SdifFile.c++:103: stray '\' in program SdifFile.c++:104: stray '\' in program SdifFile.c++:105: stray '\' in program SdifFile.c++:106: `report' was not declared in this scope SdifFile.c++:106: stray '\' in program SdifFile.c++:107: syntax error before `.' SdifFile.c++:107: stray '\' in program SdifFile.c++:108: syntax error before `.' SdifFile.c++:108: stray '\' in program SdifFile.c++:109: stray '\' in program SdifFile.c++:110: stray '\' in program SdifFile.c++:145: `rowData' was not declared in this scope SdifFile.c++:145: syntax error before `.' SdifFile.c++:164: `Partial' was not declared in this scope SdifFile.c++:164: template argument 1 is invalid SdifFile.c++:164: template argument 1 is invalid SdifFile.c++:164: template argument 2 is invalid SdifFile.c++:164: confused by earlier errors, bailing out make[2]: *** [SdifFile.lo] Error 1 make[2]: Leaving directory `/root/loris-1.0beta9/classes' make[1]: *** [all-recursive] Error 1 make[1]: Leaving directory `/root/loris-1.0beta9' make: *** [all-recursive-am] Error 2 |
From: kfitz <kf...@ee...> - 2002-07-15 17:00:42
|
There are html documentation pages in the doc directory of the Loris distribution covering the Python, Tcl, C, and C++ interfaces. There is also a demo that you can download from the sourceforge distribution site that uses a Python script to do some analysis and morphing. Finally, you can find some information, including papers and citations, on the Loris web site, http://www.cerlsoundgroup.org/Loris/ best, -kel shreeswifty wrote: > Hello list! > > My name is Pat and i am pursuing my masters in DAS at UF > i have been surveying all pvoc, morphing tools starting with cmusic, up to > PVNation and PVC4.0 > then i found loris at sourceforge... > > Spent the morning building loris-1.0a > on mac-osx 10.1.5 > is there some documentation that i may gander at > or are there som .py files list members share? > |
From: shreeswifty <pp...@be...> - 2002-07-13 18:01:40
|
Hello list! My name is Pat and i am pursuing my masters in DAS at UF i have been surveying all pvoc, morphing tools starting with cmusic, up to PVNation and PVC4.0 then i found loris at sourceforge... Spent the morning building loris-1.0a on mac-osx 10.1.5 is there some documentation that i may gander at or are there som .py files list members share? cheers~ Pat Pagano, Director South East Just Intonation Society http://www.screwmusicforever.com/SHREESWIFT/ |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@us...> - 2002-06-14 20:18:55
|
This is the official stable release of Loris 1.0. Loris includes the Loris C++ class library, a c-linkable procedural interface, a scripting interface built using SWIG (www.swig.org), and documentation. Loris is an open source C++ class library implementing analysis, manipulation, and synthesis of digitized sounds using the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Sound Model. For more information about Loris and the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Model, contact the developers at lo...@ce..., or visit them at http://www.cerlsoundgroup.org/Loris/. The primary distribution point for Loris is SourceForge (http://loris.sourceforge.net) and its mirrors. Loris is free software. Please see the file COPYING for details. For documentation, please see the files in the doc subdirectory. For a list of major changes to Loris, organized by release number, please see the file NEWS. |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@us...> - 2002-04-30 23:19:09
|
Fossa is a graphical control application for analysis, manipulation, and synthesis of sound based on functionality found in the Loris class library. It provides a graphical interface for morphing of two sounds as well as preparing operations for sound morphing, such as channelization and distillation. Reassigned bandwidth-enhanced analysis data is visually represented and results from different sound manipulations can also be audited. Fossa requires the QT library, as well as Loris. Fossa is free software developed by Susanne Lefvert. |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@us...> - 2002-04-30 22:58:36
|
This is the ninth and final beta release of Loris 1.0. Loris includes the Loris C++ class library, a c-linkable procedural interface, a scripting interface built using SWIG (www.swig.org), and documentation (not terribly up-to-date). Loris is an open source C++ class library implementing analysis, manipulation, and synthesis of digitized sounds using the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Sound Model. For more information about Loris and the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Model, contact the developers at lo...@ce..., or visit them at http://www.cerlsoundgroup.org/Loris/. The primary distribution point for Loris is SourceForge (http://loris.sourceforge.net) and its mirrors. Loris is free software. Please see the file COPYING for details. For documentation, please see the files in the doc subdirectory. For a list of major changes to Loris, organized by release number, please see the file NEWS. |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@us...> - 2002-02-15 23:37:18
|
Loris 1.0beta8 has been released. This is the eighth beta release of Loris 1.0. Loris includes the Loris C++ class library, a c-linkable procedural interface, a scripting interface built using SWIG (www.swig.org), and documentation (not recently updated). This release incorporates many new and changed features and bug fixes, some of which MAY BREAK OLD CODE. Please read the NEWS file for a detailed list of changes. This source release includes source for all supported platforms, including Mac OS. There is no longer a separate source release for Mac OS. See the README and NEWS files for details of other changes. Also note that there is no longer a demo package, the Loris demo is now attached to the Loris web page (http://www.cerlsoundgroup.org/Loris). Loris is an open source C++ class library implementing analysis, manipulation, and synthesis of digitized sounds using the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Sound Model. For more information about Loris and the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Model, contact the developers at lo...@ce..., or visit them at http://www.cerlsoundgroup.org/Loris. The primary distribution point for Loris is SourceForge (http://loris.sourceforge.net) and its mirrors. Loris is free software. Please see the file COPYING for details. For documentation, please see the files in the doc subdirectory. For a list of major changes to Loris, organized by release number, please see the file NEWS. |
From: Kelly F. <kf...@us...> - 2001-12-21 21:07:48
|
Just in time for the holidays, Loris 1.0beta7 has been released. This is the seventh beta release of Loris 1.0. Loris includes the Loris C++ class library, a c-linkable procedural interface, a scripting interface built using SWIG (www.swig.org), and documentation. This release primarily consists of code cleanup. NOTE: Iterator behavior in the scripting interface has changed in a way that MAY BREAK CODE. See the NEWS file for details. This source release includes source for all supported platforms, including Mac OS. There is no longer a separate source release for Mac OS. See the README and NEWS files for details of other changes. Also note that there is no longer a demo package, the Loris demo is now attached to the Loris web page (http://www.cerlsoundgroup.org/Loris). Loris is an open source C++ class library implementing analysis, manipulation, and synthesis of digitized sounds using the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Sound Model. For more information about Loris and the Reassigned Bandwidth-Enhanced Additive Model, contact the developers at lo...@ce..., or visit them at http://www.cerlsoundgroup.org/Loris. The primary distribution point for Loris is SourceForge (http://loris.sourceforge.net) and its mirrors. Loris is free software. Please see the file COPYING for details. For documentation, please see the files in the doc subdirectory. For a list of major changes to Loris, organized by release number, please see the file NEWS. |