Awesome
Limut
Live coding music and visuals in the browser. Inspired by FoxDot with a desire to make it more accessible by running in any modern browser with no installation. Approach to visuals inspired by Crash Server's video
player, and shadertoy :-)
Documentation
Documentation is available in the page itself, underneath the console.
Try it
Try it at https://sdclibbery.github.io/limut/
Example limut code can be pasted into the editor to see what Limut can do; this can be found on the page under the editor and console windows, or there are many examples (including some technical tests) at https://github.com/sdclibbery/limut/blob/master/examples.txt
Please report problems / bugs / browser issues etc as github issues at https://github.com/sdclibbery/limut/issues
Releases and breaking changes
Normal development should be backwards compatible. There is no specific log of added functionality (apart from the commit log).
Occasionally, breaking changes are introduced; when this happens, a new github release is produced: https://github.com/sdclibbery/limut/releases to document the upgrade path for user code.
Electron app
Limut can be run as a website, or packaged into a desktop web app. With npm installed, run npm install
to install electron, and then npm start
to run the electron app. There are no prepackaged versions available at present (pull requests welcome).
Code Editor
Limut uses the CodeMirror editor by default (https://codemirror.net). This provides syntax coloring. However, on some devices (eg mobile) a better experience may result from using a basic textarea editor; this can be enabled by using the ?textarea
url parameter.
Development
Run locally by firing up ./server.sh
and connecting a browser to http://localhost:8000/?test . The unit tests run on page load when the ?test
url parameter is present; view output in the browser console.
Samples
Piano sounds: https://archive.org/details/SalamanderGrandPianoV3
Limut's audio files have been copied from FoxDot (https://github.com/Qirky/FoxDot), where they were obtained from a number of sources. Here's a list of thanks for the unknowing creators of FoxDot's sample archive.
Legowelt Sample Kits
Game Boy Drum Kit
A number of sounds courtesy of Mike Hodnick's live coded album, Expedition
Many samples have been obtained from http://freesound.org and have been placed in the public domain via the Creative Commons 0 License: http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ - thank you to the original creators
Other samples have come from the Dirt Sample Engine which is part of the TidalCycles live coding language created by Yaxu - another huge amount of thanks.
If you feel I've used a sample where I shouldn't have, please get in touch!
Waveforms
Some waveform tables are taken from the Web Audio Samples repo, under the Apache license: https://github.com/GoogleChromeLabs/web-audio-samples
Shaders
Many shaders are based on ones from https://www.shadertoy.com/ , and the shadertoy synth uses the Shadertoy.com API to load shaders directly from shadertoy.