On Monday 18 October 2010, Matt Giuca wrote:
So my questions for any interested observers (especially FluidSynth
developers):
1. Is this feature worth implementing at all?
If you are motivated to do this work, then go ahead. Nobody has any right to
stop you of adding an improvement that you want to implement, and you believe
that it is valuable.
I don't want to comment about the implementation details
in your proposal, either. If you feel that the current API needs incompatible
changes, then this feature should go in a library version 2. That's all. Not a
big deal, this is going to happen sooner or later.
There was a proposal by Antoine Schmitt in this mailing list some time ago
about reimplementing the MIDI player using the sequencer API, in a similar way
of James' SDL patches. That may work if some problems are solved first: the
current MIDI parser is incomplete, and the sequencer lacks some features. If
this refactoring is going to happen some day it would be complementary, not
redundant, WRT your feature of reading MIDI data from a buffer instead of disk
files.
Talking about my personal interests, MIDI applications often need to parse
MIDI files to manipulate MIDI events (sometimes interactively) before sending
the events to the MIDI sequencer engine. For instance, to change the
instrument maps of melodic and percussion instruments (MIDI mappers), or to
manipulate controller events (i.e. MIDI volume), muting MIDI channels,
transposing MIDI notes on melodic channels, synchronous display of SMF
embedded song lyrics, and so on. All these functions belong not only to MIDI
editors, but also to players like KMid (http://kmid2.sourceforge.net). This
program has backends using the OS native sequencer services for Linux, Windows
and MacOSX, and I would like to implement a pure FluidSynth backend. To do
that, FluidSynth needs some new features for manipulating the playlists, but
more important: a new mechanism in the MIDI player to route selected events to
the client application, that may change them before playing. Opinions are
welcome.