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Mail Archives: djgpp/1998/01/05/15:50:06

From: "DeHackEd" <dehacked72 AT nospam DOT hotmail DOT com>
References: <68mm6s$su9 AT nnrp1 DOT farm DOT idt DOT net>
Subject: Re: Allegro 3.0 Midi Help
Date: Mon, 5 Jan 1998 12:51:34 -0500
Lines: 35
Message-ID: <#HiZMJhG9GA.274@upnetnews04>
Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp
To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com
DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp

If you truely want the old MIDI patches back, change the #if 1 in
src\djgpp\fm_instr.h to an #if 0. If you want both, it would be pretty tricky,
and you may need to write "clones" of the original functions, but it could
probably be done. It may take the sound card a second to adjoust to the new
patch set.

--
"DeHackEd"
Remove "nospam." from my email address to reply.
It's too late to run when you hear the boom.


Chia wrote in message <68mm6s$su9 AT nnrp1 DOT farm DOT idt DOT net>...
>Hi all.
>
>    I figured that I'm probably not the only one who's experiencing this...
>    I had a lot of midi files in a program that sounded relatively good with
>allegro 2.2.  Allegro 3.0 came out and I upgraded and now they sound more
>like what plays in windows.  This makes a few of them sound a lot better,
>but the others sound kind of strange and I'd like to get them back the way
>they were.
>    It was suggested that I could probably get the files out of the
>fm_instr.h file and change the name and be able to use play_midi() for the
>tracks that sound better in windows format and use some alternative name
>like play_midi_old() to play the other ones.
>    If anyone has done this already, it would save me some time and I'd
>appreciate it if you'd tell me how.
>    Thanks!
>
>                            chia AT top DOT net
>
>
>


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