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OpenScofo is an open-source score-following system specifically designed for contemporary music.

Project description

OpenScofo

OpenScofo: OpenScore Follower

OpenScofo is an open-source project designed to provide score following capabilities for contemporary music applications. Originally developed as a PureData (Pd) object, OpenScofo has now been expanded into a versatile C++ library that integrates seamlessly with multiple environments, including a Max Object, Python package, and others comming. Currently under development, OpenScofo is already functional and serves as a valuable tool for researchers and musicians.

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Goal

The aim of OpenScofo is to provide a straightforward and accessible tool for real-time score following. By keeping the software lightweight, it can run seamlessly on the web through the pd4web platform, thanks to the ability to use PureData directly in web browsers. With pd4web and OpenScofo will be possible to use the software in rehearsals with just a single click, eliminating the need for external libraries, compatibility issues, or complex installations -- ultimately facilitating the sharing and performance of contemporary music.

Collaboration and Contribution

I invite composers, researchers and developers to contribute to the OpenScofo project. Not just with code, but with theory, math, etc. I am trying to make OpenScofo acessible via a Python implementation, to test it should be easy. By sharing the source code, I am trying to provide access to the theories and mathematical formulas that drive the software, all this come from the amazing research work of Arshia Cont and Philippe Cuvillier at IRCAM.

Technical Foundations

OpenScofo uses several concepts developed by many researches (with focus on the research of Cont and Cuvillier).

  • Pitch Comparison: Utilizes the Kullback-Leibler (KL) Divergence method for pitch comparison as presented by Christopher Raphael (2006), Arshia Cont in 2008 and 2010.
  • Rhythm Synchronization: Integrates theories of rhythm synchronization developed by Edward Large and Mari Riess Jones (1999) and Edward Large and Caroline Palmer (2002), as presented for Cont (2010).
  • Forward Algorithm: For now, OpenScofo uses the equation presented by Arshia Cont (2010) and developed by Yann Guédon (2005).
  • Score Language: Based on the scofo (by Miller Puckette) and antescofo~ (by Arshia Cont, Philippe Cuvillier, and others) language.

Building

Requirements

  • On Windows, you need mingw64.

Optional

  • treesitter (npm install tree-sitter) (If you want to change/update score syntax).
  • nanobind: To build Python package.
  • PureData (optional): To build the Pd Object.

Build Options

  • OSCOFO_BUILD_ALL (ON/OFF): Build all OpenScofo modules, including Python, Pd, and Max. Default: ON.
  • OSCOFO_BUILD_PD_OBJECT (ON/OFF): Build the Pure Data (Pd) object. Default: OFF.
  • OSCOFO_BUILD_PY_MODULE (ON/OFF): Build the Python module. Default: OFF.
  • OSCOFO_BUILD_MAX_OBJECT (ON/OFF): Build the Max object. Default: OFF.
  • OSCOFO_BUILD_CSOUND_PLUGIN (ON/OFF): Build the Csound plugin. Default: OFF.
  • OSCOFO_BUILD_TESTS (ON/OFF): Build test suite. Default: OFF.
  • OSCOFO_BUILD_WITH_LUA (ON/OFF): Build Lua module embedded in OpenScofo. Default: ON.
  • UPDATE_OSCOFO_LANGUAGE (ON/OFF): Update OpenScofo language grammar (grammar.js). Default: ON.

Building Steps

git clone https://github.com/charlesneimog/OpenScofo
cmake . -B build
cmake --build build

GPLv3 Licensing Notice

OpenScofo is distributed under the GNU General Public License version 3 (GPLv3).

The GPLv3 is a free and open source license. Any software that incorporates, links to (including dynamically), or forms a combined work with OpenScofo and is distributed must also be licensed under the GPLv3, with its complete corresponding source code made available.

Non-compliance automatically terminates the license rights granted under the GPLv3 and may constitute copyright infringement.

Full license text: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html

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