|
From: | Brad Stewart |
Subject: | Re: [fluid-dev] Getting all instrument names from a loaded soundfont file |
Date: | Thu, 11 Jul 2019 08:54:01 -0700 |
User-agent: | Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; WOW64; rv:60.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/60.7.2 |
There are modules available in Python that allow you to quickly parse sound fonts. For example at pypi.org you can find sf2utils and pyFluidSynth (which provides bindings to FludiSynth). Google "python soundfont" for more info. --Brad On 7/11/2019 8:13 AM, Kjetil Matheussen
wrote:
On Thu, Jul 11, 2019 at 11:34 AM Kjetil Matheussen <address@hidden> wrote:On Thu, Jul 11, 2019 at 11:30 AM Reinhold Hoffmann <address@hidden> wrote:Hi Kjetil, Thanks for the immediate response. libgig and the code sample really looks good, simple and easy. However, libgig is under the GPL license. Our software is a commercial software where we use the libfluidsynth library strictly under the LGPL license. libgig does not offer the LGPL license but only the GPL license which we therefore cannot use.It's probably not much work parsing the soundfont files manually...Here's the spec: http://www.synthfont.com/sfspec24.pdf It's a common RIFF structure. In my experience, writing code to read and write riff files directly are often faster than trying to understand a 3rd party API. _______________________________________________ fluid-dev mailing list address@hidden https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/fluid-dev |
[Prev in Thread] | Current Thread | [Next in Thread] |