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MIDI Visualizer

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A small MIDI visualizer, written in C++/OpenGL. Binaries for Windows, macOS and Ubuntu (experimental) are available in the Releases tab. See the troubleshooting section if you encounter any issue.

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Usage

On Windows and macOS platforms, you can now run the application by simply double-clicking on it. You will then be able to select a MIDI file to load. A Settings panel allows you to modify display parameters such as color, scale, lines,... Images and videos of the track can be exported. Note that MIDIVisualizer is currently not able to play soundtracks, only display them.

Press p to play/pause the track, r to restart at the beginning of the track, and i to show/hide the Settings panel.

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Command-line use

You can also run the executable from the command-line, specifying a midi file and display options. You can also trigger a video export directly from the command line. For instance:

./MIDIVisualizer --midi path/to/file.mid --size 1920 1080 --config my/config.ini --export video.mp4  --format MPEG4

General options

--midi                             path to a MIDI file to load
--device                           name of a MIDI device to start a live session to (or VIRTUAL to act as a virtual device)
--config                           path to a configuration INI file
--size                             dimensions of the window (--size W H)
--position                         position of the window (--position X Y)
--fullscreen                       start in fullscreen (1 or 0 to enable/disable)
--gui-size                         GUI text and button scaling (number, default 1.0)
--transparency                     enable transparent window background if supported (1 or 0 to enable/disable)
--forbid-transparency              prevent transparent window background(1 or 0 to enable/disable)
--help                             display a detailed help of all options
--version                          display the current version and build information

Export options

If you want to directly export a video/images, --export ... is mandatory. You can completely hide the application window using --hide-window.

--export                           path to the output video (or directory for PNG)
--format                           output format (values: PNG, MPEG2, MPEG4, PRORES)
--framerate                        number of frames per second to export (integer)
--bitrate                          target video bitrate in Mb (integer)
--postroll                         Postroll time after the track, in seconds (number, default 10.0)
--out-alpha                        use transparent output background, only for PNG and PRORES (1 or 0 to enable/disable)
--fix-premultiply                  cancel alpha premultiplication, only when out-alpha is enabled (1 or 0 to enable/disable)
--hide-window                      do not display the window (1 or 0 to enable/disable)

Configuration options

If display options are given, they will override those specified in the configuration file. Almost every option available in the GUI can be specified on the command line, refer to the detailed help for a complete list (./MIDIVisualizer --help). Options include:

--color-bg          Background color (R G B in [0.0, 1.0])
--flashes-size      Flash effect size (number in [0.100000,3.000000])
--particles-count   Particles count (integer in [1,512])
--preroll           Preroll time in seconds before starting to play (number)
--quality           Rendering quality (values: LOW_RES, LOW, MEDIUM, HIGH, HIGH_RES)	--show-keyboard     Should the keyboard be shown (1 or 0 to enable/disable)
...

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Troubleshooting

Please note that MIDIVisualizer requires OpenGL 3.2 or higher on all platforms.

Windows

macOS

Ubuntu

Compilation

The project is configured using Cmake. You can use the Cmake GUI ('source directory' is the root of this project, 'build directory' is build/, press 'Configure' then 'Generate', selecting the proper generator for your target platform and IDE); or the command line version, specifying your target generator.

Depending on the target you chose in Cmake, you will get either a Visual Studio solution, an Xcode workspace or a set of Makefiles. You can build the main executable using the MIDIVisualizersub-project/target. If you update the images or shaders in the resources directory, you will have to repackage them with the executable, by building the Packaging sub-project/target.

Dependencies

MIDIVisualizer depends on the GLFW3 library, the sr_gui library and RtMidi17, all included in the repository and built along with the main executable. It also optionally relies on FFMPEG v4.2 for video export. For licensing reasons only MPEG-2 and MPEG-4 exports are supported for now in the release builds.

On macOS and Windows, no additional dependencies are required. On Linux, you will need to have the following packages installed: xorg-dev libgtk-3-dev libnotify libasound2-dev, and if you plan on using FFMPEG, ffmpeg libavcodec-dev libavformat-dev libavdevice-dev.

Development

The main development steps were:

More details on the initial project on my blog.