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Manpage of SCHISMTRACKER
SCHISMTRACKER
Section: User Commands (1)
Updated: January 1, 2011
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NAME
schismtracker - tracked music editor based on Impulse Tracker
SYNOPSIS
schismtracker [options] [directory] [file]
DESCRIPTION
schismtracker is a tracked music module editor that aims to match the
look and feel of Impulse Tracker as closely as possible. It can load most
common tracker formats, supports saving as IT and S3M, and can also export
to WAV and AIFF.
OPTIONS
- -a, --audio-driver=DRIVER[:DEVICE]
-
Audio device configuration. driver is the SDL driver to use, e.g.
alsa (ALSA), dma or dsp (OSS); device is the name
of the device itself, for example hw:2 or /dev/dsp1.
- -v, --video-driver=DRIVER
-
SDL video driver, such as x11, dga, or fbcon. Note that
this is different from the video driver setting within the program, and is
unlikely to be useful.
- --video-yuvlayout=LAYOUT
-
Specific YUV layout to use: YUY2, YV12, RGBA, etc.
This is probably best left alone under normal circumstances.
- --video-size=WIDTHxHEIGHT
-
Set the size of the video display.
- --video-stretch=VALUE
-
Fix the aspect ratio. (Probably does nothing!)
- --video-gl-path=PATH
-
Specify path of OpenGL library.
- --video-depth=DEPTH
-
Specify display depth, in bits.
- --video-fb-device=DEVICE
-
Specify path to framebuffer. Typical value is /dev/fb0.
- --network, --no-network
-
Enable/disable networking (on by default). Used for MIDI over IP.
- --classic, --no-classic
-
Start Schism Tracker in "classic" mode, or don't. This is mostly cosmetic,
although it does change the program's behavior slightly in a few places.
- --display=DISPLAY
-
X11 display to use.
- -f, -F, --fullscreen, --no-fullscreen
-
Enable/disable fullscreen mode at startup.
- -p, -P, --play, --no-play
-
Start playing after loading song on command line.
- --diskwrite=FILENAME
-
Render output to a file, and then exit. WAV or AIFF writer is auto-selected
based on file extension. Include %c somewhere in the name to write each
channel separately. This is meaningless if no initial filename is given.
- --font-editor, --no-font-editor
-
Run the font editor (itf). This can also be accessed by pressing Shift-F12.
- --hooks, --no-hooks
-
Run hooks. Enabled by default.
- --debug=FLAGS
-
Enable some debugging flags (separated by commas).
You probably don't need this.
- --version
-
Display version information and build date.
- -h, --help
-
Print a summary of available options.
A filename supplied on the command line will be loaded at startup.
Additionally, if either a file or directory name is given, the default
module, sample, and instrument paths will be set accordingly.
USAGE
A detailed discussion of how to use Schism Tracker is far beyond the
scope of this document, but here is a very brief rundown of the basics.
Context-sensitive help can be accessed at any time while running the
program by pressing F1.
The F3 key will bring you to the sample list. Press enter here to
open a file browser, navigate in the list using the up/down arrow keys, and
hit enter again to load a sample. You will likely want to get some samples to
work with. You can also "rip" from existing modules; see for example
http://www.modarchive.org/ for a very large selection of modules. (Keep
in mind, however, that some authors don't appreciate having their samples
ripped!)
Now that you've loaded a sample, press F2 to get to the pattern
editor. This is where the majority of the composition takes place. In
short, the song is laid out vertically, with each row representing 1/16 note;
to play multiple notes simultaneously, they are placed in different channels.
The four sub-columns of each channel are the note, sample number, volume, and
effect. A list of effects is available in the pattern editor help, but you can
safely ignore that column for now. Assuming a US keymap, notes are entered
with the keyboard as follows:
(Note) C# D# F# G# A# C# D# F# G# A# C# D#
| | || | | | || || | | | || | | | || || | | | || | |
| | || | | | || || | | | || | | | || || | | | || | |
(What you | |S||D| | |G||H||J| | |2||3| | |5||6||7| | |9||0| |
type) | '-''-' | '-''-''-' | '-''-' | '-''-''-' | '-''-' |
| Z| X| C| V| B| N| M| Q| W| E| R| T| Y| U| I| O| P|
'--'--'--'--'--'--'--'--'--'--'--'--'--'--'--'--'--'
(Note) C D E F G A B C D E F G A B C D E
(Octave 0) (Octave 1) (Octave 2)
The "/" and "*" keys on the numeric keypad change octaves, and the current
octave is displayed near the top of the screen. Try typing "qwerty" into the
pattern - it will enter an ascending note sequence, and you'll hear the notes
as they're entered. (of course, assuming you loaded a sample!) Press F6
to play your pattern, and F8 to stop.
Other important keys for the pattern editor include Ins/Del to shift notes
up and down within a channel, Shift-Arrows to mark a block, Alt-C/Alt-P to
copy and paste, and Alt-U to clear the mark. There are well over a hundred key
bindings for the pattern editor; it is well worth the effort to learn them all
eventually.
Now that you have something in your pattern, you'll need to set up an
orderlist. Press F11 to switch to the orderlist page, and type
0 to add the pattern you created. Now press F5 to start playing. The
song will begin at the first order, look up the pattern number and play that
pattern, then advance to the next order, and so forth.
Of course, having only one pattern isn't all that interesting, so go back to
the pattern editor and press the + key to change to the next pattern. Now you
can write another four bars of music and add the new pattern to the orderlist,
and the next time you play the song, your two patterns will play in sequence.
You may wish to give your song a title; press F12 and type a name in the
box at the top. You can also adjust the tempo and a number of other settings
on this page, but for now, most of them are fine at their default values.
To save your new song, press F10, type a filename, and hit enter. You
can load it again later by pressing F9.
This tutorial has deliberately omitted the instrument editor (on
F4), for the purposes of brevity and simplicity. You may want to
experiment with it once you have a feel for how the program works. (Select
"instruments" on F12 to enable instrument mode.)
HISTORY
Storlek began studying Impulse Tracker's design in 2002, noting subtle details
of the design and implementation. Posts on the Modplug forums about rewriting
Impulse Tracker were met with ridicule and mockery. "It can't be done," they
said.
Schism Tracker v0.031a was released in July 2003, though very little worked at
that point, and it was more of a player with primitive editing capabilities.
File saving was hard-coded to write to "test.it" in the current directory, and
there was no way to load a sample.
The first version that was more or less usable was 0.15a, from December 2004.
From 2005 through 2009, Mrs. Brisby did most of the development, and
implemented tons of features, including MIDI support, mouse support, and
disk writing.
Storlek "took over" development again in 2009, and has been incrementally
rewriting much of the code since then.
FILES
- ~/.schism/config
-
Program settings, stored in an INI-style format. Most options are accessible
from within Schism Tracker's interface, but there are a few "hidden" options.
- ~/.schism/startup-hook, ~/.schism/exit-hook, ~/.schism/diskwriter-hook
-
Optional files to execute upon certain events. (Must be executable)
- ~/.schism/fonts/
-
font.cfg, and any .itf files found in this directory, are
displayed in the file browser of the font editor.
Supported file formats
- MOD
-
Amiga modules (with some obscure variants such as FLT8)
- 669
-
Composer 669 / Unis669
- MTM
-
MultiTracker
- S3M
-
Scream Tracker 3 (including Adlib support)
- XM
-
Fast Tracker 2
- IT
-
Impulse Tracker (including old instrument format)
- MDL
-
Digitrakker 3
- IMF
-
Imago Orpheus
- OKT
-
Amiga Oktalyzer
- SFX
-
Sound FX
- MUS
-
Doom engine (percussion missing)
- FAR
-
Farandole Composer
- STM
-
Scream Tracker 2 (partial functionality)
- ULT
-
UltraTracker (partial functionality)
- S3I
-
Scream Tracker 3 sample
- WAV
-
Microsoft WAV audio
- AIFF
-
Audio IFF (Apple)
- 8SVX
-
Amiga 8SVX sample
- ITS
-
Impulse Tracker sample
- AU
-
Sun/NeXT Audio
- RAW
-
Headerless sample data
- PAT
-
Gravis UltraSound patch
- XI
-
Fast Tracker 2 instrument
- ITI
-
Impulse Tracker instrument
Schism Tracker is able to save modules in IT and S3M format, sample data as
ITS, S3I, AIFF, AU, WAV, and RAW, and instruments as ITI. Additionally, it
can render to WAV and AIFF (optionally writing each channel to a separate
file), and can export MID files.
AUTHORS
Schism Tracker was written by Storlek and Mrs. Brisby, with player code from
Modplug by Olivier Lapicque. Based on Impulse Tracker by Jeffrey Lim.
Additional code and data has been contributed by many others; refer to the
file AUTHORS in the source distribution for a more complete list.
The keyboard diagram in this manual page was adapted from the one used in
the documentation for Impulse Tracker, which in turn borrowed it from Scream
Tracker 3.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright © 2003-2012 Storlek. Licensed under the GNU GPL
<http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>. This is free software: you are free
to change and redistribute it. There is NO WARRANTY, to the extent permitted
by law.
BUGS
They almost certainly exist. Post on http://schismtracker.org/scdev/
if you find one. Agitha shares her happiness with benefactors of the
insect kingdom.
INTERNETS
http://schismtracker.org/ - main website
http://schismtracker.org/sc/ - userbase discussion board
#schism on Freenode - IRC channel
SEE ALSO
chibitracker(1),
milkytracker(1),
renoise(1),
ocp(1),
xmp(1)
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- OPTIONS
-
- USAGE
-
- HISTORY
-
- FILES
-
- Supported file formats
-
- AUTHORS
-
- COPYRIGHT
-
- BUGS
-
- INTERNETS
-
- SEE ALSO
-
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Time: 13:43:46 GMT, June 29, 2013