Sedsongs: Difference between revisions
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(For more example files, see the examples that come with midge. | (For more example files, see the examples that come with midge. Where are those? Try the command: | ||
dpkg --listfiles midge | dpkg --listfiles midge | ||
to see and look for the .mg files) | to see and look for the .mg files) |
Revision as of 23:41, 8 October 2010
This exercise explores how the pipeline can be used to translate textual data (in this case the numbers of the current date and time) into a short musical sequence.
timidity
MIDI is a file format (and general protocol for communication between keyboards and synthesizers) that was created in the 1980s. Timidity is a good program to play midi files. Here is a sample file (File:I.mid). Play with:
timidity I.mid
midge
The MIDI file format is a binary one. This means that you need special tools that understand the format to work with them (create / modify). [seq24] is one such tool.
Midge is a program that tranlates a (plain) text file in a particular markup language, into a playable (binary) midi file. This lets us work simply with text as a means of producing a MIDI song.
According to midge's special notation / markup, a very simple song would be:
@head {
$time_sig 4/4
$tempo 120
}
@body {
@channel 1 {
$patch 1
$octave 4
$length 16
# notes here!
c e g
}
}
(For more example files, see the examples that come with midge. Where are those? Try the command:
dpkg --listfiles midge
to see and look for the .mg files)
To prepare the midi file, you'd type the following command (assuming the above is called "song.mg":
midge song.mg
This produces an output file (if there were no errors), called "a.mid.out". You can choose a nicer name with the -o option:
midge song.mg -o song.mid
sed
sed is one of the most powerful (if sometimes cryptic) commandline program. In this case we create a simple "sed script" to perform a number of search and replace operations. In each case the rule takes the form:
s/a/b/g
Which means, search for "a", replace with "b", and replace all (the "g" or global option).
Below, the rules replace each digit with a tone (from c to a sharp). The first rule means "replace anything that isn't a number with nothing" (ie delete them).
s/[^0123456789]//g
s/1/c /g
s/2/c+ /g
s/3/d /g
s/4/d+ /g
s/5/e /g
s/6/f+ /g
s/7/g /g
s/8/g+ /g
s/9/a /g
s/0/a+ /g
You can run this sed script (assume it's called "digits.sed") with:
sed -f digits.sed
This will then wait for you to type some input, type something like:
123123 111 222 333
And press Ctrl-D and see what happens.
Note that extra spaces are added so that each note is separated as midge requires.
wrap.sh
This is a simple script that outputs the midge file header, then outputs whatever is coming through the pipeline (stdin) -- this is the lone "cat" command, and finally outputs the end of the midge file format. In other words, when you pipe some notes into this script, you get a simple complete midge file.
cat <<EOF
@head {
\$time_sig 4/4
\$tempo 120
}
@body {
@channel 1 {
\$patch 1
\$octave 4
\$length 16
# notes here!
EOF
cat
cat <<EOF
}
}
EOF
pipeline
date | sed -f digits.sed | bash wrap.sh | midge -o sed.mid
timidity sed.mid