Hi Mike, If you do see Chiron, could you ask him if he would be happy passing on details of his MIDI interface? Regards, Chris On 10 May 2017 at 15:56 Mike Stein <mhs.stein@gmail.com> wrote: > > Thanks! > > Chiron used to come to TPUG meetings once in a while; will have to talk to him next time. > > m > ----- Original Message ----- > From: Nick Vivid > To: cbm-hackers@musoftware.de > Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 10:29 AM > Subject: Re: PET user port programming > > > The wayback machine archived it over the years. > > > https://web.archive.org/web/*/http://petsynth.org/ > > > > On May 10, 2017 10:02 AM, "Mike Stein" <mhs.stein@gmail.com> wrote: > > Looks like he's let the site expire; any other links to PetSynth anywhere? > > m > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Leif Bloomquist" <leif@schemafactor.com> > To: <cbm-hackers@musoftware.de> > Sent: Wednesday, May 10, 2017 9:01 AM > Subject: Re: PET user port programming > > > MIDI on the PET, cool! > > You should check out PetSynth, I believe the source code is available: > > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PetSynth > http://www.petsynth.org/ > > While it's a player not a sequencer, it also uses an Arduino on the > user port and creative use of timers from what I recall. Anyway, > worth looking at. > > > (I'd love to see a PET duet, your sequencer code on PET #1 and > PetSynth on PET #2) ;-) > > Cheers, > -Leif > > > > > > -- > Leif Bloomquist | leif@schemafactor.com | +1 416-737-2328 | Check out > my blog! http://www.jammingsignal.com > > "Every choice, no matter how small, begins a new story." - xkcd > > > On Wed, May 10, 2017 at 6:25 AM, Chris Wareham <chris@chriswareham.net> wrote: > > Hi, > > > > I've just signed up to the list as I'm currently writing a simple MIDI sequencer for my PET 4032. I'm using the cc65 compiler suite, but having difficulties finding information on user port programming and timing. > > > > At the moment I have a home made circuit on a breadboard with an LED for each of the data pins on the user port. When I write a byte to the data register for port A the corresponding LEDs light up. The missing pieces of the jigsaw are how to do the timing so that bytes get written at the correct intervals and the handshaking so I know when each byte has been read. I'm guessing I do the timing by setting a timer and handling interrupts, but neither of my two PET programming books cover this. > > > > MIDI messages consist of three bytes, but I've got my pseudo MIDI messages down to two bytes: > > > > mnnnnnnn ccccvvvv > > > > Where: > > > > m is 1 for note on or 0 for note off > > nnnnnnn is the note number 0-127 > > cccc is channel 0-15 > > vvvv is velocity 0-15 > > > > MIDI supports velocity values of 0-127, so I plan on shifting my 4 bit value to get a reasonable spread of velocities. I plan on using an Arduino to convert my pseudo MIDI messages into real ones. Hopefully I can then make an interface with a suitably programmed Atmega chip rather than a complete Arduino board. > > > > Any advice will be most gratefully appreciated! > > > > Regards, > > > > Chris > > > > Message was sent through the cbm-hackers mailing list > > Message was sent through the cbm-hackers mailing list > > > Message was sent through the cbm-hackers mailing list Message was sent through the cbm-hackers mailing listReceived on 2017-05-10 16:01:03
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