Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!unixhub!stanford.edu!leland.Stanford.EDU!portia!vlis From: vlis@lurch.stanford.edu (John Vlissides) Newsgroups: comp.windows.interviews Subject: Re: Music Editor Message-ID: Date: 13 Apr 91 22:29:45 GMT References: <9104130721.AA09120@brahma.trl.OZ.AU> Sender: news@leland.Stanford.EDU (Mr News) Organization: stanford university Lines: 31 In-Reply-To: s.michnowicz@trl.oz.au's message of 13 Apr 91 22:21:38 GMT In article <9104130721.AA09120@brahma.trl.OZ.AU> s.michnowicz@trl.oz.au (Simon Michnowicz - A Free Spirit) writes: Newsgroups: comp.windows.interviews Path: leland.Stanford.EDU!stanford.edu!trl.oz.au!s.michnowicz From: s.michnowicz@trl.oz.au (Simon Michnowicz - A Free Spirit) Sender: news@shelby.stanford.edu (USENET News System) Organization: Internet-USENET Gateway at Stanford University Date: 13 Apr 91 22:21:38 GMT Lines: 7 I just read the TourGuide of InterViews 3, and noticed that there is a music editor capable of producing MIDI output. I wonder if someone can tell me the name of this editor, as I can not seem to see it at interviews.stanford.edu. Thanks Simon Michnowicz I'm not sure what you mean by the "TourGuide of InterViews 3," but I do know that we don't distribute a MIDI-generating music editor. Any such allusion you saw was probably meant to exemplify the type of application that Unidraw supports. Other examples of so-called graphical object editors are drawing editors, schematic capture systems, diagram editors, user interface builders---basically any application that provides a direct-manipulation environment for conveying information to other systems. -- John Vlissides Computer Systems Laboratory Stanford University vlis@lurch.stanford.edu