Hi Anders, thanks for the opportunity to mention your full name. If the reviewers accept my article, it will be published in Musicologica Brunensis, No.2, 2024. But it will be written in Czech. Do you speak Czech? :-)) How are you?
Hi petrh,
If I remember correctly, OM# does exactly that. It translates the content of patches into lines of LISP code.
All the best,
António
Hi, can you please be a little more specific ? p.
Hi,
Sure, here: https://cac-t-u-s.github.io/pages/lisp#getting-the-equivalent-lisp-code-of-a-patch
That’s from OM#'s own documentation.
All the best,
António
Hi, thanks! P.
Unfortunately not. Woule be interesting to read though, perhaps getting some help from some online translation tool?
Hallo, sorry I’m late. I was waiting to see if my paper would be successful in the peer review process. And in the end, it was accepted without reservation. It will be published in a WOS and SCOPUS registered scientific journal called Musicologica Brunensia. It will be published in issue 2, which will be published at the end of 2024. I will be happy to send you the article in PDF format, DEPL will easily translate it for you. In the article I will state that you have optimized my original algorithm, or rather, that you have written a new algorithm for me while preserving the original features. Have a nice day and thanks, Petr
Congrats!
Yes, i’d love to read your article! You can upload it here, or send it to anders@avinjar.no
Hi, thanks and happy to send the article! Maybe some more collaborations will be born out of this , hello, P
Hi, I would like to ask if you have any AI library for OM. Is there any such thing? I’m thinking of a variant for GAs like OM Darwin, maybe a variant for common aleatory tools. Do you have any info? Greetings from Prague, Petr
Hi Petrh
any AI library for OM
There’s the OMAI lib @ GitHub - andersvi/omai. OMAI was developed as part of a research project, left in the state it was when the project ended. I dont expect the current state is suitable for most people.
It has some interesting tools, perhaps most notably a vector space class, and a 2D-vector-space graphical editor.
Hopefully i’ll get some time and opportunity to continue with OMAI. I beleive its a cool project
Btw, OMAI is developed in om#, probably needing special care to work w. OM7
Hi, it’s great that something like this was created. I looked on GitHub but I was not able to understand “what” OMAI is. Is it a library? What are its functions? How does OMAI work? What does it “do”? Did Jean Bresson from IRCAM - the creator of OpenMusic - help you?
Hi Petrh. As mentioned, the lib isn’t suitable for anyone else atm.
I should probably make the repo un-public. You can read the pdf there for some info.
And yes, Jean was very much part of the work.
Hi Anders,
What about MIR? Did you guys ever implement any of the MIR functions specified?
All the best,
António
Hi Anders, I am sending you a published article that was published in the journal Musicologica Brunnensia (wos, scopus). On page 40, note 29 I state that I used an optimized version of the analysis algorithm and that you do the optimization. Using Deepl or another translator, hopefully the article will be understandable in English. By the way, I would like to do computer-assisted analysis (and the article is about computer-assisted analysis) in the future. I also describe the theoretical “concept of regularity”, which is the basis for such analysis, in the article. But everything needs some grant/support/sponsorship. I have thought about institutional collaboration with IRCAM, but I have not yet studied the possibilities of international grants. That’s why I asked if you work at an institution that the University where I work could collaborate with. So these are the things I’m thinking about
I send greetings from Prague, Petr
Congratulations! A translated version looks very impressive, i will definitely read it more throughly
-anders