Hi, does anybody knows if it's planned the development of an editor for SFZ's patches?
If not, it could be very helpful to have a text editor launched when I click "edit" in a sample channel (in both Fantasia and Qsampler).
Thanks!
SFZ editor?
Re: SFZ editor? - SFZed is a free editor!
Hi, there is already a fee sfz editor in the net that allows listening while editing. It is called SFZed. Your can find it here:
http://audio.clockbeat.com/sfZed.html
What is missing, and therefore you are right, is a chance to edit linuxsampler in this way, that linuxsampler allows SFZed to be the default editor for SFZ files.
Today I did not find any linuxsampler.ini file or something like that, so i think entrys for editors are not possibly yet.
Best Regards, Markus
http://audio.clockbeat.com/sfZed.html
What is missing, and therefore you are right, is a chance to edit linuxsampler in this way, that linuxsampler allows SFZed to be the default editor for SFZ files.
Today I did not find any linuxsampler.ini file or something like that, so i think entrys for editors are not possibly yet.
Best Regards, Markus
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Windows XP SP2, 4GB (3,5GB) RAM, Phenom X4, Linuxsampler, Reaper, Sonar
Windows XP SP2, 4GB (3,5GB) RAM, Phenom X4, Linuxsampler, Reaper, Sonar
Re: SFZ editor?
Yes, I know it... but I use LinuxHi, there is already a fee sfz editor in the net that allows listening while editing. It is called SFZed. Your can find it here:
Re: SFZ editor?
An SFZ editor would be certainly useful.
If anyone is considering building something like this (for linux), then a function to automatically populate an sfz text file with multiple sample names from a folder would be a considerable time saver.
Alex.
If anyone is considering building something like this (for linux), then a function to automatically populate an sfz text file with multiple sample names from a folder would be a considerable time saver.
Alex.
Re: SFZ editor?
Regarding the sfz tool, I would like following workflow:Alex wrote:...then a function to automatically populate an sfz text file with multiple sample names from a folder would be a considerable time saver.
0. create a dir
1. create inside dir, as many subdirs as you want, names are in the range 0..127
2. put as many .wav samples into those subdirs to your desire
3. each subdir name/number defines the samples pitch-mapping, so all samples in subdir = 36, will be mapped to pitch 36, meaning you should put there normally kick samples. 42 for closed hihats and so on.
4. if you have more than a sample in a subdir, they will be used and mapped to different velocity ranges, supporting at maximum 16 velocity ranges, not to make it too complex. sorting of samples according to alphabet.
5. run the script and you get your multi-velocity-layer mapped sfz file, from your sample sorting in those subdirs.
Another related question? Is there any other command line tool, for win, which can convert an .lm4 file to .sfz?