Sender: crough45 AT amc DOT de Message-Id: <97May15.161801gmt+0100.16654@internet01.amc.de> Date: Thu, 15 May 1997 15:21:57 +0100 From: Chris Croughton Mime-Version: 1.0 To: ndf AT ecr DOT mu DOT oz DOT au Cc: djgpp AT delorie DOT com Subject: MIDI and DJGPP input (re: Allegro / MPU401 MIDI input) Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit Precedence: bulk Nathan Fraser wrote: > So far I have fpound lots of midi resources > (see below) What, out of interest, were you searching on? I found that if I narrowed the search so that I only got a reasonable number of hits then I missed that site totally. > but all of them are based around assembly code > that is not compatible with the GNU assembler... Indeed - but at least one is Borland format and I still have my Borland compilers. I used to be very experienced with Borland and assembler... > and as I am a very > inexperience programmer it is of no use to me. If anyone > knows how to decode this into a DJGPP friendly code please > help... I'll certainly try. This is exactly the sort of thing I've been looking for - it's using the MPU401 in intelligent mode... > http://www.maxmidi.com/toolkit/ I was dubious about the copyright policies of this one, so I decided to leave it for now... > there are also some older libraries but these are written > for 286 beasts and are full of old-style c functions. No problem, that's what protoize is for... > http://www.midiweb.com/programming/files/mpu401-c.zip > http://www.midiweb.com/programming/files/mpusr2.zip Yes, these are the ones... Thank you, you've earned a credit notice already ... Chris C