From 21c068f1916330e90f814bed461fe0821d1665ec Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Hans-Christoph Steiner Date: Sun, 9 Oct 2011 16:36:37 +0000 Subject: checked in pd-0.43-0.src.tar.gz svn path=/trunk/; revision=15557 --- pd/doc/1.manual/x1.htm | 82 ++++++++++++++++++-------------------------------- 1 file changed, 29 insertions(+), 53 deletions(-) (limited to 'pd/doc/1.manual/x1.htm') diff --git a/pd/doc/1.manual/x1.htm b/pd/doc/1.manual/x1.htm index 00fa7da1..92585e69 100644 --- a/pd/doc/1.manual/x1.htm +++ b/pd/doc/1.manual/x1.htm @@ -48,20 +48,16 @@ This manual has five sections:
  • release notes and known bugs -

    In order to consult the reference and example patches, you'll first have -to get Pd started as explained in this manual. -

    For a list of all the objects you can use in Pd, see the text file, "0.INTRO.txt" in the directory, "../5.reference". To get help on any Pd object you can right click on it; or you can browse the help patches -by choosing "Pure Documentation..." in the Pd help menu and looking in +by choosing "Browser..." in the Pd help menu and looking in 5.reference.

    -The example patches are also available from the "Pure Documentation..." item -in Pd's -"help" menu. The example patches appear in subdirectories named +The example patches are also available from the "Browser..." item +in Pd's "help" menu. They appear in subdirectories named "2.control.examples", "3.audio.examples" and "4.fft.examples." Some additional patches in "7.stuff" might also be helpful. @@ -70,73 +66,53 @@ To get started writing your own C extensions, refer to chapter 4 of this manual.

    1.2. other resources

    -

    There is a new Pd community web site, +

    There is a very extensive Pd community web site, pure-data.info, which aims to be the central resource for Pd, from documentation and downloads; to forums, member pages, and a patch exchange. -

    There is a growing number of Pd-related projects hosted at -SourceForge. This is open to all Pd -developers, and all are encouraged to join; send an email to the pd-dev list -(see below). +

    More documentation is avalable on the Pd FLOSS site: + +en.flossmanuals.net/PureData/ (English) and + +fr.flossmanuals.net/PureData/ (French).

    -Most of the interesting resources related to Pd show up on the Pd mailing list, +Most of the interesting news related to Pd shows up on the Pd mailing list, maintained by Iohannes Zmoelnig. To subscribe or browse the archives visit: - - http://iem.kug.ac.at/mailinglists/pd-list/. + + http://iem.at/mailinglists/pd-list/. -. This is the +This is the best source of recent information regarding installation problems and bugs. It is perfectly reasonable to post "newbie" questions on this list; alternatively you can contact msp@ucsd.edu for help. -

    Many extensions to Pd are announced on the mailing list. In particular, -for people interested in graphics, there is a A 3D graphics rendering package, -named GEM, based on OpenGL, written by Mark Danks, adapted to Linux by -Guenter Geiger, and now maintained by Iohannes Zmoelnig. GEM runs on -Windows and Linux and probably will run with some coaxing on IRIX. You can get -it from: http://iem.kug.ac.at/GEM . - -

    At least three video processing packages are available for Pd. The oldest -is Framestein, by Juha Vehvilainen. This runs on Windows only: http://framestein.org . -The newer PDP -library, by Tom Schouten, and its extension PiDiP by Yves Degoyon, run well -in linux and have been ported to Windows and MacOS. -Mathieu Bouchard has written -Gridflow , which runs on linux and MacOSX. The mathematical operators are -more powerful than in PDP, and the design makes smarter use of cache behavior -in modern CPUs. - -

    the Pd extended package, maintained by Hans-Christof Steiner, can be +

    the Pd Extended package, maintained by Hans-Christophe Steiner, can be downloaded from the Pd's sourceforge site . All this and much more is described in detail on http://puredata.info/. +

    Many extensions to Pd are announced on the mailing list. In particular, +for people interested in graphics, there is a 3D graphics rendering package, +named GEM, based on OpenGL, written by Mark Danks, adapted to Linux by +Guenter Geiger, and now maintained by Iohannes Zmoelnig. You can get +it from: http://iem.kug.ac.at/GEM, or by +installing Pd Extended.

    -Here are some more Pd links (in the order I found them):
    - +Here are some more Pd links (updated 2/2011):
    + +Andy Farnell's Tutorial
    + +Alexandre Porres's Tutorial (Portuguese)
    + +Puckette's book, Theory and Techniques of Electronic Music
    Miller Puckette's home page
    - Guenter Geiger's home page
    - Mark Dank's home page
    - + Johannes M Zmoelnig
    - -Krzysztof Czaja's MIDI file support
    - -David Sabine's Pd Documentation Project: -new, highly detailed help windows
    -Fernando Pablo Lopez's augmented Pd RPMs from Planet CCRMA
    - -Cyclone - Krzysztof Czaja's Max compatibility library
    -On-line book: - Theory and Techniques of Electronic Music
    - +Fernando Pablo Lopez's RPMs from Planet CCRMA

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