[Stk] "patching" approach to stk?

Stephen Sinclair sinclair at music.mcgill.ca
Fri Feb 4 09:30:14 PST 2011


On Fri, Feb 4, 2011 at 12:21 PM, Tristan Matthews
<le.businessman at gmail.com> wrote:
> 2011/2/4 Stephen Sinclair <sinclair at music.mcgill.ca>
>>
>> On Thu, Feb 3, 2011 at 6:06 PM, Morgan Packard <morgan at morganpackard.com>
>> wrote:
>> > Hi Stephen,
>> > I feel like I may have asked a similar question here months ago, and
>> > gotten
>> > a response from you :)
>> > I'd like to keep everything in C++ land, use C++ to construct ugen
>> > graphs,
>> > not have to worry about running a separate interpreter, or generating PD
>> > files, especially if someone has already written something which makes
>> > doing
>> > so a little easier.
>> > The end of your email says:
>> > *************************
>> > An interesting tool might be
>> >
>> > Steve
>> > ************************
>> > are you offering to do my work for me? :)
>>
>> Sorry i was looking for something to suggest but couldn't find it,
>> then forgot to erase that line before hitting send ;)
>>
>> No I remember there was some kind of IDE/Platform someone designed
>> some time ago for doing "live coding" with C++.  I can't remember what
>> it was called though, so I can't find it.  But basically it would
>> compile your C++ files on the fly into dynamic libraries, load them
>> up, and execute your modified program without stopping.  It allowed
>> you to do Chuck- or SuperCollider-like programming but in C++.
>>
>> Wish I could remember the name..
>
> Was it Emacs? ;)
>
> -t (still a lowly vim user)

Haha, no.  Although that would be great!  RT-SND is interesting for
this kind of thing, actually, if you like lisp-like languages.

Steve



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