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* Preparations for new release (1.2.1).
1 Version 1.2.1 (2024-01-26)
2
3 This is a maintenance release with some fixes.
4
5 Most changes are about adopting to libgig 4.4.0 API changes, which in turn
6 fix various multi-threading issues.
7
8 Version 1.2.0 (2021-05-09)
9
10 This release provides various new features and as always of course also
11 numerous fixes.
12
13 A C++11 compliant compiler is now at least required to build Gigedit from
14 source.
15
16 The real-time instrument script editor supports now syntax highlighting for
17 LinuxSampler's new standard measuring units (kHz, c, ms, dB, etc.) feature for
18 the NKSP script language. On the right hand side of Gigedit (the main working
19 area actually) there is now a new tab "Script" which reveals a list of so
20 called NKSP "patch" variables, which are variables published by instrument
21 script authors to be directly accessible from the instrument editor and allows
22 to override the values of certain instrument script variables on a per
23 instrument basis in order to fine tune certains aspects of a script for
24 individual instruments.
25
26 Latest LinuxSampler 2.2.0 added various gig format extensions which are now
27 available on Gigedit side as well: for instance for LFOs you can select from
28 multiple wave forms (sine, triangle, square and saw) and you can fine tune
29 the start phase of each LFO. To make it more intuitive the resulting LFO wave
30 is drawn as preview on screen according to the chosen LFO parameters. Another
31 gig format extension by latest LinuxSampler are new filter types which can be
32 chosen from (along to the already existing filter types which will continue to
33 co-exist): lowpass 1/2/4/6-pole, highpass 1/2/4/6-pole, bandpass 2-pole and
34 bandreject 2-pole.
35
36 A new dialog has been added to access the meta info of individual samples,
37 similar to the meta info dialog that already existed for individual
38 instruments.
39
40 Gain can now be set to any arbitary value between -96 dB .. +96 dB. Previously
41 it was only possible to set gain to max. 0 dB and there was a checkbox which
42 allowed a hard coded boost to exactly +6 dB. The previous appearance
43 replicated the appearance of GigaStudio's original instrument editor. The
44 previous limitation of having just a single possible value for positive gain
45 was unfortunate, but as it turned out this was actually not a limitation of
46 the original gig file format. And in fact we have not added any gig file
47 format extension for this reason to achieve this new freedom of arbitrary gain
48 settings. So setting a positive gain of e.g. let's say +1.45 dB does not break
49 compatibility of your sounds with GigaStudio.
50
51 And last but not least various minor convenience functions have been added,
52 for instance the default double click behaviour on instruments (which would
53 open their meta info dialog) can now optionally be disabled, window size,
54 position and vertical spliter position are now auto saved and restored among
55 Gigedit sessions and the up/down buttons' steps have been individually
56 adjusted to make more sense for the individual synthesis parameters they
57 control. And regarding the latter: remember that the up/down steppers do
58 actually have two distinct operations per button: a regular left-mouse click
59 for small changes and middle-mouse click for larger changes. Both have been
60 adjusted appropriately for the individual synthesis parameters they control.
61
62 Version 1.1.1 (2019-07-27)
63
64 This is a maintenance release with numerous fixes and the following
65 few new features:
66
67 From the file properties dialog you can now choose to specifically save a
68 gig file in GigaStudio v4 file format (from the main menu select
69 "File" -> "Properties" -> "File Format"). So you can override the file
70 format version of already existing gig files that way.
71
72 There is now a combo box and checkbox on "Misc" tab which allow to define
73 when precisely release trigger samples shall be played. This is an
74 extension of the original gig file format. You have the option to play
75 release trigger samples only on note-off events (which is now the default
76 behaviour in the latest release version of LinuxSampler), or only on
77 sustain pedal up events, or both on note-off events and on sustain pedal
78 up events. These are options on dimension region level, so you can
79 override this behaviour even for individual cases, not just for the
80 entire instrument.
81
82 When working on gig files with more than one real-time instrument script
83 per file, it was sometimes a bit tedious to keep track of which instrument
84 was using which script exactly, because it involved a right-click on the
85 individual instrument to get to the script slots dialog of the instrument,
86 which finally listed the scripts being used. You no longer have to do that
87 just to check which scripts are being used: Just hover your mouse over the
88 "Scripts" column of the instruments table on the left hand side of
89 gigedit; a coloured popup will appear with the list of scripts currently
90 being assigned to the instrument.
91
92 Likewise it is a very common task to remove all scripts from an
93 instrument. There is now a keyboard shortcut for that: Just select the
94 instrument from the instruments list and then hit Shift + Backspace.
95
96 Gigedit provides a large number of tooltips when you are hovering your
97 mouse over the huge amount of individual controls and menu items the
98 application is offering in the meantime. In case you find that annoying,
99 you can now disable those particular tooltips which are specifically
100 intended for beginners from the main menu by unchecking "View" ->
101 "Tooltips for Beginners". All other tooltips that are still useful for
102 daily work with gigedit are still being shown when this option is
103 unchecked.
104
105 The previous release of gigedit introduced "Macros" for quickly
106 performing frequently used sequences of editor actions, and you were able
107 to assign your macros to keyboard function keys F1 .. F12. In this release
108 you can now also assign macros to function keys up to F19, in case you own
109 one of those keyboards with such a large amount of function keys.
110
111 Version 1.1.0 (2017-11-25)
112
113 This release adds various improvements for the NKSP real-time instrument
114 script editor of gigedit. LinuxSampler's NKSP script editor API is now
115 used by gigedit to visualize all issues of scripts (errors and warnings)
116 in real-time while you are typing with the script editor. The respective
117 locations of script errors / warnings are automatically highlighted in
118 red and yellow color respectively and when the mouse pointer is moved
119 over those code locations, then the precise error / warning message is
120 displayed as tooltip. And since gigedit's script editor is now tightly
121 coupled with the sampler's script engine this way, all the heavy work of
122 handling all aspects of the script language is now performed by the actual
123 sampler's script engine and thus you can now be sure and immediately see
124 whether there are any issues with your scripts with any character you are
125 typing, and if yes what kind of issues exactly, and that without
126 requiring to actually load the script into the sampler. To use these
127 features, gigedit must be compiled and linked against liblinuxsampler.
128 If gigedit is not compiled with liblinuxsampler support then the old hand
129 written, error prone and very feature limited script editor implementation
130 is used instead. Needless to say that compiling gigedit without
131 liblinuxsampler support is discouraged. Additionally when clicking on the
132 script editor's "Apply" button or using Ctrl+S keyboard shortcut, then
133 the script is automatically reloaded by the sampler. So you no longer
134 have to reload the respective instrument manually while you are
135 developing instrument scripts. There are also visual enhancements for the
136 script editor, for example the line numbers are now shown on the left,
137 the font size can be altered by the user, and unused code portions (i.e.
138 disabled by NKSP preprocessor statements) are automatically striked
139 through.
140
141 Another major new feature in this release are macros. A macro is a set of
142 changes that should be applied to currently selected instrument. Such
143 macros can be reviewed and edited, and they can be saved permanently for
144 example as templates for common instrument creation tasks. Macros can be
145 assigned to F keys on the keyboard so that they can be quickly triggered,
146 you can transfer them over the OS clipboard and you can write comments
147 to your macros so that you never forget what kind of purpose you had in
148 mind for them. The macro features are based on libgig's new
149 "Serialization" framework and accordingly you need at least libgig 4.1.0
150 for using these macro features.
151
152 All user settings of gigedit are now persistently saved and automatically
153 restored. This also includes gigedit's windows' dimensions and positions.
154
155 Multi-row selection has been added to all list views now, so you can now
156 more efficiently apply actions to multiple samples, instruments or scripts
157 simultaneously at once, instead of requesting those actions for each item
158 individually.
159
160 Also modifying key features of several dimension region zones
161 simultaneously is now supported. That means you can now delete, split and
162 resize multiple dimension region zones at once.
163
164 You will also note that there are now icons displayed on the individual
165 regions and dimension region zones. Those icons visualize common key
166 features of regions and dimension region zones. For example if you forgot
167 to assign any sample to one of them, then you will see a red dot on the
168 respective region or dimension region zone. Another icon type is showing
169 you whether a region or dimension region zone uses a sample loop. This way
170 you can immediately see and control the key features of all regions
171 and their dimension region zones, without requiring to browse through all
172 of them individually.
173
174 Various new keyboard shortcuts have been added so you can work more
175 efficiently on your sounds. For example you can now use Ctrl+Left and
176 Ctrl+Right to navigate through all regions of the currently selected
177 instrument, and likewise you can use Alt+Left, Alt+Right, Alt+Up and
178 Alt+Down to navigate through all dimension region zones of the currently
179 selected region. Since there are many actions that can be either applied
180 on instrument level, or on region level, or on dimension region level, as
181 a general rule, for all keyboard shortcuts the Alt key is used by gigedit
182 for actions on dimension region level, whereas the Ctrl key is used on
183 region level and the Shift key is used for actions on instrument level.
184 So as another example you may copy all parameters of the currently
185 selected dimension region zone by hitting Alt+C, then you might select
186 another dimension region zone, or another instrument and then use Alt+V
187 to apply the parameters from the clipboard. While the parameters are
188 (as macro actually) on the clipboard you can also review, edit and
189 delete the individual parameters before applying them. As a final
190 example for new important shortcuts you may now use Shift+Up and
191 Shift+Down for switching between instruments.
192
193 Also the Combine Tool has been improved. You can now simply select the
194 (multiple) instruments you want to combine directly from the applications
195 main window, i.e. by Ctrl or Shift clicking them from the instruments
196 list view, and then right click to call the combine tool on that
197 selection. The Combine Tool now also shows you as preview the order in
198 which the selected instruments are going to be combined. This is
199 especially useful when combining instruments with certain dimension
200 types where the order matters for the actual resulting sound; for example
201 when using the velocity dimension. Simply use drag n drop to reorder
202 the previously selected instruments before combining.
203
204 Since LinuxSampler 2.1.0 added a Giga format extension which allows to
205 control the envelope generators' state machines more precisely; new
206 options have been added to gigedit to control these new EG features.
207 For example there are new check box which you can use to define for
208 each envelope whether the individual EG stages should still be completed
209 or rather aborted if a note-off was received. These new EG settings matter
210 a lot for certain instrument types like percussive instruments.
211
212 And last but not least a filter option field had been added to the
213 instruments list and samples list, which allows you to find specific
214 samples and instruments very quickly by typing search key words, which is
215 especially very helpful in case you are working on gig files which contain
216 a very large amount of samples or instruments in a single gig file.
217
218 Version 1.0.0 (2015-07-17)
219
220 With this release we added support for new GigaStudio 4 features, for
221 example there are now dialogs for editing some of the new so called
222 "iMIDI rules". These can be used i.e. to trigger notes by MIDI CC and to
223 define a set of legato samples. You may have heard that the GigaStudio
224 software has seen its last version with GigaStudio 4. Tascam officially
225 discontinued this product, its intellectual property has been sold several
226 times among companies and there is currently no way to buy a new copy of
227 GigaStudio anymore. However the GigaStudio format is still under active
228 development with gigedit and LinuxSampler. For the first time ever we added
229 our own extensions to the Giga format: one of it is major new feature
230 called "real-time instrument scripts", which allows to bundle small programs
231 with your .gig sounds, which extend the sampler with custom behavior for
232 specific sounds. You may know such kind of instrument scripts from
233 commercial software samplers. Find out more about this new feature on
234 http://doc.linuxsampler.org/Instrument_Scripts/. Another rather minor
235 extension to the Giga format is support for various other MIDI CCs which
236 were never supported by GigaStudio before. So you can now use any MIDI CC
237 for EG1 controller, EG2 controller and attenuation controller. Obviously all
238 those extensions will not work with any GigaStudio version, they only work
239 with a recent version of Gigedit and LinuxSampler. Gigedit will inform you
240 whenever you are using such kind of custom Giga format extension, so that you
241 are always aware in case your changes are not cross/backward compatible with
242 the GigaStudio software. A load of enhancements have been added to Gigedit
243 in the last six years: Until now you were only able to edit either exactly
244 one dimension region or all dimension regions simultaneously. With this
245 release you may now hold the Ctrl button and select a specific set of
246 dimension region zones in the dimension region selector area (on the very
247 bottom of the Gigedit window) with your mouse. All synthesis parameters you
248 then change, will all be applied to that precise set of dimension region
249 zones. Also managing dimensions have been improved: previously to change the
250 amount of zones of a dimension you had to delete and recreate the dimension.
251 Which was not just inconvenient, but you also had to redefine your synthesis
252 parameters from scratch. Now you can just open the dimension manager dialog
253 and increase or decrease the amount of zones of a dimension with few clicks.
254 Same applies to the dimension type: you may now simply open the dimension
255 manager dialog and alter the type of a dimension with few clicks.
256 When working on complex Giga sounds you certainly noticed that one could
257 easily get confused about which samples are exactly used by which instrument
258 or even whether a sample is actually used at all by any instrument or just
259 left orphaned and wasting disk space. This was also due to the fact that the
260 Giga format does not require unique names for samples. We have worked on
261 resolving this usability issue. In the sample list view you can now read the
262 amount of times a sample is referenced by instruments of your .gig file. If a
263 sample is not used at all, then it will be shown in striking red color in
264 the sample list view. You may also right click on a sample and select
265 "Show references...", a new window appears on your screen which will show you
266 where exactly that particular sample is used by, that is which by which
267 instruments and by which regions of those instruments. Also the other way
268 around has been addressed: when you now edit the synthesis parameters of a
269 particular dimension region, you may now click on the new "<- Select Sample"
270 button and Gigedit automatically selects and displays the respective sample
271 in the samples list view, which you may then might rename to some more
272 appropriate sample name, or you might check by which other instrument(s) that
273 sample is used by, etc. You may now also remove the current sample reference
274 from individual dimension regions (assigning a so called "NULL" sample) by
275 clicking on the new "X" button next the sample reference field on the
276 "Sample" tab of a dimension region; this allows you to define "silent cases",
277 that is a case where no sample should be played at all, for example this is
278 often used for very low velocity ranges of i.e. between 0 and 6. If you are
279 working on .gig files with a large amount of Instruments, then you might also
280 be glad to know that you can finally also re-order the instruments of a file
281 by simply dragging the instruments around in the instruments list view.
282 Another handy new feature for sound designers is the new "Combine" tool,
283 which you can reach from the main menu. It allows you to select two ore more
284 instruments (by holding down the Ctrl key while selecting with mouse click)
285 from your currently open Giga file and combine those selected instruments to
286 a new instrument. This way you may for example create stunning layered
287 sounds, or you may create velocity splits, crossfade sounds by MIDI
288 controller and much more, all with just a few clicks. This may sound like a
289 trivial task, but if you have worked on this before, you certainly noticed
290 that this was often a very time consuming and error prone task before,
291 especially with complex individual sounds which had custom region ranges,
292 custom velocity splits and much more exotic stuff to take care of. The
293 combine tool handles all such cases for you automatically.
294 Last but not least, the interaction of Gigedit with LinuxSampler (in so
295 called "live mode") had been improved: When you click on the "Edit" button of
296 a channel strip in QSampler or Fantasia, Gigedit will be launched with the
297 respective instrument automatically being selected. Vice versa you may now
298 also just select another instrument with Gigedit's instrument list view and
299 LinuxSampler will automatically load and play that instrument on the
300 respective sampler part for you. So no more need to switch between the
301 Gigedit window and QSampler/Fantasia window all the time while working on
302 your sounds.
303
304 Version 0.2.0 (2009-07-31)
305
306 When gigedit is running as a plugin in LinuxSampler the gigedit
307 keyboard may now be used to trigger notes. The settings in the file
308 properties window are now editable. A new function for replacing all
309 samples is added. Otherwise this is mostly a bug fix release, and
310 upgrading gigedit and libgig is strongly recommended, as previous
311 versions had bugs that may cause edited gig files to be corrupted.
312
313 Version 0.1.1 (2007-12-06)
314
315 Parameter edits can now be applied to multiple regions and dimension
316 regions simultaneously - three checkboxes were added that select if
317 changes apply to all regions and/or all dimension regions.
318
319 Version 0.1.0 (2007-10-15)
320
321 Many fixes have been made to make sure that the gig files created by
322 gigedit are working properly in LinuxSampler and GigaStudio. Gigedit
323 can now be run as a LinuxSampler plugin, allowing live editing of
324 loaded instruments. Sample loop parameters and instrument global
325 properties can now be edited. 24 bit samples can be imported. A
326 quick-start document has been added. Lots of other minor fixes and
327 improvements have been done.
328
329 Version 0.0.3 (2007-03-24)
330
331 First version of gigedit. The program is renamed from gigview to
332 gigedit as it is now an editor, not just a viewer. Basic support for
333 both editing existing gig files and creating new ones from scratch
334 is provided.
335
336 Version 0.0.2 (2006-11-05)
337
338 Quick fix for a thread initialization problem.
339
340 Version 0.0.1 (2006-11-05)
341
342 First version of gigview.

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