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ROSEGARDEN 10.02, codename "Thorn" (to be) RELEASED
IMPORTANT: THIS HAS NOT HAPPENED YET
This page is only a working area for making notes about what is being done for the 10.02 release, so that we don't forget anything when the code is finally ready to be released – which will not be for some time yet.
The Rosegarden team is proud to announce the release of version 10.02 of Rosegarden, an audio and MIDI sequencer and musical notation editor for Linux.
http://www.rosegardenmusic.com/
With this release, we finally bring an end to the long and difficult job of transforming Rosegarden from an obsolete KDE 3 application into a modern Qt 4 application. We had aimed to defer the largest rewriting jobs until after an initial release of the new code, but so many things broke along the way that we were forced to dive into many refactoring projects ahead of schedule. The result is a leaner, cleaner Rosegarden with less cruft, and some exciting new features.
Usability Enhancements
With its bold new custom look, including hundreds of new icons, Rosegarden ensures all of its interface elements are usable, freeing you to configure the rest of your system any way you like
With its more compact, netbook-friendly interface, Rosegarden gets more done with less screen real estate
Rosegarden has a low installation footprint, and creates local, user-editable copies of all example and library files
Expanded translations (varies by language) put more of Rosegarden in your native language than has ever been possible before
You may now run as many instances of Rosegarden as you like, in parallel, and can even install and run different versions simultaneously
Enhanced device management support, including an all-new MIDI device manager, finally addresses a number of long-standing usability issues and bugs
Control rulers (notation and matrix) completely redesigned from the ground up to use primary editing tools (eg. pencil) and present controller data as a series of connected points that may be manipulated very fluidly and easily
Control rulers share a selection with the main edit view (notation or matrix), allowing control events to be cut, copied and pasted along with notes
A number of non-critical warning dialogs about system configuration issues have been moved out of your way, and onto a compact health indicator at the bottom right of the main window
You can add, display and access what we hope will prove to be an effectively unlimited number of MIDI controllers in the instrument parameters box, eliminating the need for an alternative tabbed layout mode
New streamlined interface merges the insertion cursor functions into the playback cursor, so Rosegarden has only one cursor at long last
All new integrated project packager provides built-in, native support for Rosegarden project packages, eliminates a number of obscure dependencies, and provides a cleaner user experience
Document modified status is indicated in the title bar
Markers text entry fields have been renamed to make it more clear which of the two editable texts is the functional one
The simple event editor now handles notation-quantized notes more intelligently
All but a few keyboard shortcuts are now exposed through menu entries or tooltips, to facilitate learning
Improved controller manager dialog now opens the editor automatically after creating a new controller
Grace notes are scaled correctly relative to full-sized notes (in a way that may lead to true support of cue-sized notation in the future)
New Features
General
Most windows have special function-related icons associated with them, so it is easier to use your desktop task manager to find the window you seek
Improved flashing metronome mode and more realistic looking LEDs for the transport
Rosegarden comes bundled with a library of composition templates (.rgt files), and any file can be saved as a template with the new File ⇒ Save As Template option
New support for Frontier Design Group’s TranzPort™ contributed by Immanuel Litzroth
The MIDI device manager can now import bank and program information from LinuxSampler .lscp files
The automatic clef guessing feature (used in a variety of contexts, such as when importing MIDI or splitting a segment by pitch) now adds transposing clefs to its repertoire in order to avoid excessive ledger lines in parts that extend to the extremes of reproducible pitch
Notation
Higher quality on-screen rendering removes the annoying chromatic artifacts that have afflicted all previous versions, and provides crisp, clear rendering
New pan and zoom allows you to move around quickly, and zoom the window contents as far in or out as you like, or zoom either axis independently
Print and Print Preview are both performed through LilyPond, which provides extremely high-quality output
Expanded range of point sizes (from 6 to 30) available for LilyPond export
New interactive LilyPond Print/Preview allows you to configure your preferences for which applications you prefer to use for printing files and viewing PDFs, and compares the result of the LilyPond conversion operation against your LilyPond export options in order to offer intelligent suggestions for what steps to take when things go wrong
New support for notation symbols, giving Rosegarden the ability to display (non-operative) segno, coda and breath mark symbols
New marks for open, stopped/muted, and harmonic/flageolet
New cycle slashes function allows you to use the / shortcut or the new toolbar icon to cycle through from 0 to 5 slashes on selected notes
All marks are exported to LilyPond now, and mark placement has been aligned with LilyPond's placement rules, following the philosophy that they have spent vastly more time studying best notation practices than we have, and where we disagreed, we were wrong
Add Trill With Line moves from Note =⇒ Marks… and the marks toolbar to Phrase and the group toolbar, reflecting an internal change that transforms this from a mark attached to a single note into a more flexible indication that can span any number of (usually tied) notes. The mark version still exists internally to preserve compatibility with existing compositions
Even quicker and improved keyboard access to inserting notes and rests, with the default duration determined by the denominator of the current time signature
More compact notation toolbar layout combines note and rest entry in one place, freeing up space, and improving efficiency
When using the notation editor to insert notes, long notes are tied at barlines by default, so red barlines are less common
Matrix
At long last it is possible to open multiple segments (from any number of different tracks) in the same matrix view
Cleaner interface leaves the instrument parameters in the main window, so you have more room for editing what's important
New pan and zoom allows you to move around quickly, and zoom the window contents as far in or out as you like, or zoom either axis independently
The pitch highlights on I III and V are now calculated relative to the key signature in effect, rather than being fixed against C major
Is is now possible to insert key changes from the matrix
The standard matrix now allows the possibility of opening the same segments in a percussion matrix, and vice versa
New Pitch Bend Sequence allows you to insert a series of calculated, machine-generated pitch bends to create a variety of vibrato effects
Translucent event bars make it easier to see and work with overlapping notes
Audio
If the JACK audio server is not already running, Rosegarden will start it for you transparently
If you attempt to record to a document named “Untitled” you will be prompted to name your composition before continuing, so as to promote better housekeeping over time
New controls available from the main window and the audio mixer allow you to give audio and synth plugin instruments (eg. “Audio #3” or “Synth #5”) custom names
When recording, the composition title and custom audio instrument name (if provided) are used in the filename in order to make it much easier to work with recorded audio files outside of their original context. Instead of rg-20091123-102030-1.wav you can now have something like rg-[Jam Session 12]-[Bobs_Guitar]-2009-11-23_10.20.30-1.wav
Available Languages
The following translations are [expected to be at this rate] complete and up to date for this release:
Czech
Finnish
German
Spanish
The Porting Team
We'd like to give special thanks to the following members and contributors, some old, some new, for their outstanding work on the long and difficult port. These brave few are the authors of a new chapter in our history.
Chris Cannam
Michael McIntyre
Julie Swango
Emanuel Rumpf
Yves Guillemot
Chris “CJ” Fryer
Heikki Junes
Shelagh Manton
Jani Frilander
Mikko Vepsäläinen
Ilan Tal
Thanks To
Bug Fixes
The project packager can now handle spaces in paths and filenames
Faders can now be moved in both directions with the mouse scroll wheel
Corrected LilyPond export of double octave clefs
Corrected rendering problem when moving expanded-height tracks
Controller editor dialog now keeps track of the color index properly
Newly created knobs of color “default” now display the correct color, rather than black
Rosegarden no longer creates useless, confusing extra devices, which solves many related problems
Percussion tracks now sound when importing broken MIDI files that use zero-length notes for percussion
The forward and back tab navigation buttons on the MIDI mixer work properly now
Problems with the “trill with line” mark solved through the new indication, which allows a trill to span multiple tied notes, and allows all of this to export to LilyPond correctly
Corrected export of sustain pedal notation for LilyPond 2.12
The main window no longer expands horizontally upon loading files that were last saved with a high level of zoom
When grace notes occur at a height that requires ledger lines, the ledger lines are now drawn at the correct size
Notation staffs now respect user font configuration choices consistently
Thanks to
The KDE translation team took on an enormous number of difficult translations for us, and we are in their debt!
Active translators for this release:
Heikki Junes
D. Michael McIntyre
Thorsten Alteholz
Yves Guillemot
Alexandre Prokoudine
Jani Frilander
Pavel Fric
Stefan Asserhall
Other people who contributed to Rosegarden development:
Immanuel Litzroth
Thorsten Alteholz
Vladimir Savic
Alexander Kulikov
Stefan Asserhall
People who contributed device files to the Rosegarden Library
Greg Lyons
Georg Balzer
Theo Smit
ADR
Sezer Dursun
Julie Swango
Geoff King
Pietro Pedrozzi
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