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    Pushing Messages onto an Array?

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    • clevername27C
      clevername27 @d.healey
      last edited by

      | The MIDI list is useful if you wan to store one value per note. A common scenario is storing the velocity for each note.

      Isn't that only useful if I want to store less than 129 notes?

      ustkU d.healeyD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • ustkU
        ustk @clevername27
        last edited by

        @clevername27 I follow Dave, in this case you need a message holder, which is in fact a midi sequence. But I haven't played with it for a while too :)

        Can't help pressing F5 in the forum...

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        • ustkU
          ustk @clevername27
          last edited by ustk

          @clevername27 I'd say a midlist is useful when you want to hold a value during a time or until something happens so you reset the value until the next instance, or at the next instance of that note.
          A message holder is more a sequence where you store the timestamp as well so it can be played back or batch modified, etc...

          So if you want to record all events and keep them in a sequence -> message holder

          Can't help pressing F5 in the forum...

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • d.healeyD
            d.healey @clevername27
            last edited by d.healey

            @clevername27 said in Pushing Messages onto an Array?:

            | The MIDI list is useful if you wan to store one value per note. A common scenario is storing the velocity for each note.

            Isn't that only useful if I want to store less than 129 notes?

            Each real note (that comes from a keyboard press or DAW) can only have one velocity at a time. If you play MIDI note 60 its velocity would go in slot 59 of the MIDI list. If you play MIDI note 60 again it would overwrite the previous value. Unless you have a keyboard with two middle Cs there wouldn't be an issue.

            Libre Wave - Freedom respecting instruments and effects
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            clevername27C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • clevername27C
              clevername27 @d.healey
              last edited by

              @d-healey Thank you for answering my question; I'm still a little confused. Let's say I want to record 1,000 notes. But if the MIDIList can only be 128 elements long, wouldn't that mean I can only store 128 notes?

              d.healeyD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • d.healeyD
                d.healey @clevername27
                last edited by d.healey

                @clevername27 The MIDI list isn't for that purpose. It's not like an event list in a DAW.

                Christoph explains it in this post - https://forum.hise.audio/topic/79/scripting-best-practices

                Libre Wave - Freedom respecting instruments and effects
                My Patreon - HISE tutorials
                YouTube Channel - Public HISE tutorials

                clevername27C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • clevername27C
                  clevername27 @d.healey
                  last edited by clevername27

                  @d-healey Thank you for the reference - I guess I'm still not seeing how this object would be useful here. Off the cuff, this object has a performance advantage because it allocates all 128 slots at once, allowing pointer mathematics to access individual slots (instead of pulling them individually off the heap or from the stack). In @Christoph-Hart 's example for an array of notes, he simply uses a regular array (i.e., traditional linked list).

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                  Christoph HartC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Christoph HartC
                    Christoph Hart @clevername27
                    last edited by

                    There is another container class called unordered stack which can hold the full event data but I think it‘s also limited to 256 slots.

                    clevername27C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • clevername27C
                      clevername27 @Christoph Hart
                      last edited by clevername27

                      @Christoph-Hart Thank you - I'm also realizing you explicitly wrote in the documentation that the performance advantage of the MIDI List is not gained from pre-allocating the memory, so I'm not correct there.

                      Christoph HartC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • Christoph HartC
                        Christoph Hart @clevername27
                        last edited by

                        With a bit more context of your use case I might help you out. Your initial approach is not recommended, the array will allocate in the audio thread (and the AudioThreadGuard should complain).

                        clevername27C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • clevername27C
                          clevername27 @Christoph Hart
                          last edited by clevername27

                          @Christoph-Hart Thank you, kindly. I'm looking to:

                          1. Capture all incoming MIDI notes in real-time.

                          2. Offline, I will adjust the Note-On and Note-Off timestamps.

                          3. Finally, pipe the resulting note list into a MIDI Player, and play it back in time with the host DAW.

                          Cheers, mate. I would post and comment my code for the community.

                          Christoph HartC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • Christoph HartC
                            Christoph Hart @clevername27
                            last edited by

                            Before you reinvent the wheel, you are aware that the MIDI player has a record function that does exactly this? You can even supply it a post processing function that will give you an array of all new events that you then can process (eg. for quantization).

                            I'm using this in a current product I'm working on, so I would consider it stable but under documented - like everything in HISE that comes fresh out of the oven :)

                            These MIDIPlayer functions are useful in this case:

                            • setUseTimestampInTicks() - calling this in onInit is highly recommended as it will use ticks instead of samples as unit which makes sample rate agnostic operations much more simple (960 ticks = 1 quarter).
                            • record() / stop(): obvious...
                            • setRecordEventCallback() - supply it with a function that modifies the array of MessageHolders before it gets written into the MIDI sequence
                            • setSyncToMasterClock() hooks the MIDI player to be controlled by the master clock (and then use the TransportHandler for DAW syncing).
                            NatanN clevername27C 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • NatanN
                              Natan @Christoph Hart
                              last edited by

                              @Christoph-Hart
                              Legend, Could you please Do an example for these?
                              setUseTimestampInTicks()
                              MidiPlayer.setSyncToMasterClock

                              clevername27C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • clevername27C
                                clevername27 @Natan
                                last edited by clevername27

                                @Natan EDIT: What I've written below is approximate, not actual code. You'll need to create MIDI player in your Module Tree.

                                const TH = Engine.createTransportHandler();
                                TH.setEnableGrid(true, 4);
                                TH.setSyncMode(TH.PreferExternal);
                                TH.setOnGridChange(true, GridChange);
                                const var yourMidiPlayer = Synth.getMidiPlayer("myMidiPlayer");
                                yourMidiPlayer.setUseTimestampInTicks();
                                yourMidiPlayer.setSyncToMasterClock(true);
                                

                                You'll need to either create a new sequence or load one.

                                NatanN 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                • clevername27C
                                  clevername27 @Christoph Hart
                                  last edited by

                                  @Christoph-Hart Thank you for the suggestion. I tried that first, actually, but the MIDI player, and particularly recording, seemed oriented to looping a couple bars (e.g., MidiPlayer.create(int nominator, int denominator, int barLength))?

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • NatanN
                                    Natan @clevername27
                                    last edited by Natan

                                    @clevername27 Thank you so Much Mate <3 :folded_hands:
                                    Is there any difference that I Can hear, I Mean the results of the above code are obvious or it's a daw and Midi Thing?

                                    IMPORTANT! And one Quick question, Let's say I have 3 MidiPlayers, is It safe to use the code three times? or Inside a Loop?

                                    clevername27C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • clevername27C
                                      clevername27 @Natan
                                      last edited by

                                      @Natan Can you explain your first question in more detail? If you have three MIDI players, then you'd need to do this for all three—you'd call this at init, not inside a loop.

                                      ustkU 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • ustkU
                                        ustk @clevername27
                                        last edited by ustk

                                        @clevername27 except if they are stored in an array:

                                        const var yourMidiPlayers = [Synth.getMidiPlayer("myMidiPlayer1"),
                                        			     Synth.getMidiPlayer("myMidiPlayer2"),
                                        			     Synth.getMidiPlayer("myMidiPlayer3")];
                                        
                                        for (p in yourMidiPlayers)
                                        {
                                        	p.setUseTimestampInTicks();
                                        	p.setSyncToMasterClock();
                                        }
                                        

                                        Can't help pressing F5 in the forum...

                                        clevername27C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                        • clevername27C
                                          clevername27 @ustk
                                          last edited by clevername27

                                          @ustk Ah, OK cheers - I wasn't sure what @Natan meant by an array. Do you know what the error message "You have to enable the master clock before using this method" is?

                                          ustkU 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • ustkU
                                            ustk @clevername27
                                            last edited by

                                            @clevername27 following this:

                                            void ScriptingObjects::ScriptedMidiPlayer::setSyncToMasterClock(bool shouldSyncToMasterClock)
                                            {
                                            	if (shouldSyncToMasterClock && !getScriptProcessor()->getMainController_()->getMasterClock().isGridEnabled())
                                            	{
                                            		reportScriptError("You have to enable the master clock before using this method");
                                            	}
                                            	else
                                            	{
                                            		getPlayer()->setSyncToMasterClock(shouldSyncToMasterClock);
                                            	}
                                            }
                                            

                                            The grid has to be enabled

                                            Can't help pressing F5 in the forum...

                                            clevername27C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
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