Re: aspiring CoreAudio devs
Re: aspiring CoreAudio devs
- Subject: Re: aspiring CoreAudio devs
- From: Simon Haycock <email@hidden>
- Date: Sat, 04 Aug 2012 11:12:33 +0100
Hi Joshua.
I got started by learning how to create a list of the audio devices available on your machine (that are listed in Audio Midi Setup). From there, you can learn to interact with these devices, including creating an IO procedure to get an audio device to call a callback function. Audiohardware.h is a very useful reference! If you would like some code to get you started, let me know and I will ping something over.
Cheers
Simon
Sent using my thumbs.
On 3 Aug 2012, at 20:00, email@hidden wrote:
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> 1. aspiring CoreAudio devs (Joshua Case)
> 2. Re: aspiring CoreAudio devs (Andy Robinson)
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> Message: 1
> Date: Fri, 03 Aug 2012 12:10:34 -0400
> From: Joshua Case <email@hidden>
> To: email@hidden
> Subject: aspiring CoreAudio devs
> Message-ID: <email@hidden>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
>
> In searching the archives, I see that this comes up fairly frequently, but as the resources constantly evolve and update and the only thing that seems to stay the same is 'constant change', it seems reasonable to post it again.
>
> I'm a musician and fairly sophisticated computer user. To deepen my appreciation of both computers and music, I've decided to learn to program for the Mac. I'm on an Audio "track" but the path enlightenment in this area is a little hard to see. I've bought Programming in Objective-C 2.0, by Steve Kochan, and Cocoa Programming For Mac Os X by Hillegass and Preble. Both books have been great, and very informative. They've built tons on top of my basic C/procedural understanding and given me deep insight into Mac OS X. Both books however leave me feeling a little underprepared for audio programming and I'm wondering what's next.
>
> My question for the group would be - what would you prescribe as an ideal path for learning, as an audio minded dev in August of 2012? What is there, no matter how small or trivial sounding, that you wish someone would have told you as you were getting started?
>
> I'm not all that interested in the business of software and I don't imagine I'll be selling applications at all, but I'm really interested in the process of building tools for music.
>
> I'd like to gather some of your input to make a "Getting started in Audio Programming" guide on the web at some point.
>
> Thanks for reading, and in advance for any input you might have.
>
> Joshua Case
> NY, NY USA
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> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Fri, 03 Aug 2012 17:19:34 +0100
> From: Andy Robinson <email@hidden>
> To: email@hidden
> Subject: Re: aspiring CoreAudio devs
> Message-ID: <email@hidden>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1; format=flowed
>
> "Learning Core Audio: A Hands-On Guide to Audio Programming for Mac and
> iOS" by Chris Adamson & Kevin Avila.
>
> Regards,
> Andy Robinson
>
> On 03/08/12 17:10, Joshua Case wrote:
>> In searching the archives, I see that this comes up fairly frequently,
>> but as the resources constantly evolve and update and the only thing
>> that seems to stay the same is 'constant change', it seems reasonable to
>> post it again.
>>
>> I'm a musician and fairly sophisticated computer user. To deepen my
>> appreciation of both computers and music, I've decided to learn to
>> program for the Mac. I'm on an Audio "track" but the path enlightenment
>> in this area is a little hard to see. I've bought Programming in
>> Objective-C 2.0, by Steve Kochan, and Cocoa Programming For Mac Os X by
>> Hillegass and Preble. Both books have been great, and very informative.
>> They've built tons on top of my basic C/procedural understanding and
>> given me deep insight into Mac OS X. Both books however leave me feeling
>> a little underprepared for audio programming and I'm wondering what's next.
>>
>> My question for the group would be - what would you prescribe as an
>> ideal path for learning, as an /audio /minded dev in August of 2012?
>> What is there, no matter how small or trivial sounding, that you wish
>> someone would have told you as you were getting started?
>>
>> I'm not all that interested in the business of software and I don't
>> imagine I'll be selling applications at all, but I'm really interested
>> in the process of building tools for music.
>>
>> I'd like to gather some of your input to make a "Getting started in
>> Audio Programming" guide on the web at some point.
>>
>> Thanks for reading, and in advance for any input you might have.
>>
>> Joshua Case
>> NY, NY USA
>>
>>
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> End of Coreaudio-api Digest, Vol 9, Issue 228
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