For example,
SwingSliderMidi.java, requires rwmidi.jar
https://gist.github.com/heuermh/8872723
SwingSliderOsc.java, requires oscP5.jar
https://gist.github.com/heuermh/8872771
Rich, might you be able test whether these provide reasonable accessibility?
Thanks,
michael
On Fri, Feb 7, 2014 at 12:38 PM, Michael Heuer
Hello Rich,
That is great feedback. Most Processing libraries I use for communication with ChucK (p5osc, rwmidi, Midibus) also work outside of Processing
http://www.sojamo.de/libraries/oscP5/ https://github.com/wesen/rwmidi http://smallbutdigital.com/themidibus.php
so the UI could be written in java with either AWT or Swing controls, both of which have strong accessibility support (although I have not needed to depend on it).
Personally I don't like using a mouse or touchscreen; I was drawn to ChucK in the first place because I could do everything from an editor and the command line. And then building your own hardware with real sliders and buttons and knobs is not very difficult or expensive any more. For example, this costs less than $20
A Very Simple DIY USB MIDI Controller http://little-scale.blogspot.com/2012/10/a-very-simple-diy-usb-midi-controll...
michael
On Fri, Feb 7, 2014 at 11:50 AM, Rich Caloggero
wrote: OK, as a blind user I feel I have to weigh in on this one. None of these solutions are at all accessible. Of course, it probably doesn’t matter if its a research project or for personal use (unless of course the author is also a screen reader users), but I feel it needs to be said. Ironically enough, Music, and sound processing / generating software in general, is one of the least accessible categories of software out there.
I’m sure that Python has a widgit/gui library that’s accessible (the NVDA screen reader is written in Python and uses these widgits extensively for its own gui), but can’t remember what its called now. You could also write the UI in html, but then you’d need node.js with web sockets to translate the tcp messages to UDP for OSC.
The miniaudical is not accessible, and neither is processing from what I’ve seen.
Just my two cents. -- Rich
From: Joel Matthys Sent: Friday, February 07, 2014 9:25 AM To: chuck-users@lists.cs.princeton.edu Subject: Re: [chuck-users] Listener
You could create the sliders in Tcl/Tk and direct the output to ChucK on the command line; there's a good example of that with the piece "Granite09" in the PlorK repository: http://plork.cs.princeton.edu/Repository/PLOrk.zip
Another option is to build a user interface in Processing (http://processing.org) and send the slider values as OSC messages to ChucK. The OSC documentation for ChucK is pretty good; there's a section in the manual and a few samples in the examples folder.
Joel
On 02/07/2014 12:47 AM, Philipp Blume wrote:
I am looking to implement a listener into my (very simple) ChucK program. I want to operate a bank of virtual sliders that send their position to ChucK.
In what program/application can I build such a slider, and where in the ChucK API can I read up on listeners? I don't yet know my way around the documentation, though I do have the Kapur, Cook, Salazar, & Wang text which is wonderful.
Thanks in advance!
Philipp Blume
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