bionic (3) MIDI::Event.3pm.gz

Provided by: libmidi-perl_0.83-1_all bug

NAME

       MIDI::Event - MIDI events

SYNOPSIS

         # Dump a MIDI file's text events
         die "No filename" unless @ARGV;
         use MIDI;  # which "use"s MIDI::Event;
         MIDI::Opus->new( {
            "from_file" => $ARGV[0],
            "exclusive_event_callback" => sub{print "$_[2]\n"},
            "include" => \@MIDI::Event::Text_events
          } ); # These options percolate down to MIDI::Event::decode
         exit;

DESCRIPTION

       Functions and lists to do with MIDI events and MIDI event structures.

       An event is a list, like:

         ( 'note_on', 141, 4, 50, 64 )

       where the first element is the event name, the second is the delta-time, and the remainder are further
       parameters, per the event-format specifications below.

       An event structure is a list of references to such events -- a "LoL".  If you don't know how to deal with
       LoLs, you must read perllol.

GOODIES

       For your use in code (as in the code in the Synopsis), this module provides a few lists:

       @MIDI_events
           a list of all "MIDI events" AKA voice events -- e.g., 'note_on'

       @Text_events
           a list of all text meta-events -- e.g., 'track_name'

       @Nontext_meta_events
           all other meta-events (plus 'raw_data' and F-series events like 'tune_request').

       @Meta_events
           the combination of Text_events and Nontext_meta_events.

       @All_events
           the combination of all the above lists.

FUNCTIONS

       This module provides three functions of interest, which all act upon event structures.  As an end user,
       you probably don't need to use any of these directly, but note that options you specify for
       MIDI::Opus->new with a from_file or from_handle options will percolate down to these functions; so you
       should understand the options for the first two of the below functions.  (The casual user should merely
       skim this section.)

       MIDI::Event::decode( \$data, { ...options... } )
           This takes a reference to binary MIDI data and decodes it into a new event structure (a LoL), a
           reference to which is returned.  Options are:

           'include' => LISTREF
                           If specified, listref is interpreted as a reference to a list of event names (e.g.,
                           'cue_point' or 'note_off') such that only these events will be parsed from the binary
                           data provided.  Events whose names are NOT in this list will be ignored -- i.e., they
                           won't end up in the event structure, and they won't be each passed to any callbacks
                           you may have specified.

           'exclude' => LISTREF
                           If specified, listref is interpreted as a reference to a list of event names (e.g.,
                           'cue_point' or 'note_off') that will NOT be parsed from the binary stream; they'll be
                           ignored -- i.e., they won't end up in the event structure, and they won't be passed
                           to any callbacks you may have specified.  Don't specify both an include and an
                           exclude list.  And if you specify neither, all events will be decoded -- this is what
                           you probably want most of the time.  I've created this include/exclude functionality
                           mainly so you can scan a file rather efficiently for just a few specific event types,
                           e.g., just text events, or just sysexes.

           'no_eot_magic' => 0 or 1
                           See the description of 'end_track', in "EVENTS", below.

           'event_callback' => CODEREF
                           If defined, the code referred to (whether as "\&wanted" or as "sub { BLOCK }") is
                           called on every event after it's been parsed into an event list (and any EOT magic
                           performed), but before it's added to the event structure.  So if you want to alter
                           the event stream on the way to the event structure (which counts as deep voodoo),
                           define 'event_callback' and have it modify its @_.

           'exclusive_event_callback' => CODEREF
                           Just like 'event_callback'; but if you specify this, the callback is called instead
                           of adding the events to the event structure.  (So the event structure returned by
                           decode() at the end will always be empty.)  Good for cases like the text dumper in
                           the Synopsis, above.

       MIDI::Event::encode( \@events, {...options...})
           This takes a reference to an event structure (a LoL) and encodes it as binary data, which it returns
           a reference to.  Options:

           'unknown_callback' => CODEREF
                           If this is specified, it's interpreted as a reference to a subroutine to be called
                           when an unknown event name (say, 'macro_10' or something), is seen by encode().  The
                           function is fed all of the event (its name, delta-time, and whatever parameters); the
                           return value of this function is added to the encoded data stream -- so if you don't
                           want to add anything, be sure to return ''.

                           If no 'unknown_callback' is specified, encode() will "warn" (well, "carp") of the
                           unknown event.  To merely block that, just set 'unknown_callback' to
                           "sub{return('')}"

           'no_eot_magic' => 0 or 1
                           Determines whether a track-final 0-length text event is encoded as a end-track event
                           -- since a track-final 0-length text event probably started life as an end-track
                           event read in by decode(), above.

           'never_add_eot' => 0 or 1
                           If 1, "encode()" never ever adds an end-track (EOT) event to the encoded data
                           generated unless it's explicitly there as an 'end_track' in the given event
                           structure.  You probably don't ever need this unless you're encoding for straight
                           writing to a MIDI port, instead of to a file.

           'no_running_status' => 0 or 1
                           If 1, disables MIDI's "running status" compression.  Probably never necessary unless
                           you need to feed your MIDI data to a strange old sequencer that doesn't understand
                           running status.

           Note: If you're encoding just a single event at a time or less than a whole trackful in any case,
           then you probably want something like:

                     $data_r = MIDI::Event::encode(
                       [
                         [ 'note_on', 141, 4, 50, 64 ]
                       ],
                       { 'never_add_eot' => 1} );

           which just encodes that one event as an event structure of one event -- i.e., an LoL that's just a
           list of one list.

           But note that running status will not always apply when you're encoding less than a whole trackful at
           a time, since running status works only within a LoL encoded all at once.  This'll result in non-
           optimally compressed, but still effective, encoding.

       MIDI::Event::copy_structure()
           This takes a reference to an event structure, and returns a reference to a copy of it.  If you're
           thinking about using this, you probably should want to use the more straightforward

                     $track2 = $track->copy

           instead.  But it's here if you happen to need it.

EVENTS AND THEIR DATA TYPES

   DATA TYPES
       Events use these data types:

       channel = a value 0 to 15
       note = a value 0 to 127
       dtime = a value 0 to 268,435,455 (0x0FFFFFFF)
       velocity = a value 0 to 127
       channel = a value 0 to 15
       patch = a value 0 to 127
       sequence = a value 0 to 65,535 (0xFFFF)
       text = a string of 0 or more bytes of of ASCII text
       raw = a string of 0 or more bytes of binary data
       pitch_wheel = a value -8192 to 8191 (0x1FFF)
       song_pos = a value 0 to 16,383 (0x3FFF)
       song_number = a value 0 to 127
       tempo = microseconds, a value 0 to 16,777,215 (0x00FFFFFF)

       For data types not defined above, (e.g., sf and mi for 'key_signature'), consult MIDI::Filespec and/or
       the source for "MIDI::Event.pm".  And if you don't see it documented, it's probably because I don't
       understand it, so you'll have to consult a real MIDI reference.

   EVENTS
       And these are the events:

       ('note_off', dtime, channel, note, velocity)
       ('note_on', dtime, channel, note, velocity)
       ('key_after_touch', dtime, channel, note, velocity)
       ('control_change', dtime, channel, controller(0-127), value(0-127))
       ('patch_change', dtime, channel, patch)
       ('channel_after_touch', dtime, channel, velocity)
       ('pitch_wheel_change', dtime, channel, pitch_wheel)
       ('set_sequence_number', dtime, sequence)
       ('text_event', dtime, text)
       ('copyright_text_event', dtime, text)
       ('track_name', dtime, text)
       ('instrument_name', dtime, text)
       ('lyric', dtime, text)
       ('marker', dtime, text)
       ('cue_point', dtime, text)
       ('text_event_08', dtime, text)
       ('text_event_09', dtime, text)
       ('text_event_0a', dtime, text)
       ('text_event_0b', dtime, text)
       ('text_event_0c', dtime, text)
       ('text_event_0d', dtime, text)
       ('text_event_0e', dtime, text)
       ('text_event_0f', dtime, text)
       ('end_track', dtime)
       ('set_tempo', dtime, tempo)
       ('smpte_offset', dtime, hr, mn, se, fr, ff)
       ('time_signature', dtime, nn, dd, cc, bb)
       ('key_signature', dtime, sf, mi)
       ('sequencer_specific', dtime, raw)
       ('raw_meta_event', dtime, command(0-255), raw)
       ('sysex_f0', dtime, raw)
       ('sysex_f7', dtime, raw)
       ('song_position', dtime)
       ('song_select', dtime, song_number)
       ('tune_request', dtime)
       ('raw_data', dtime, raw)

       Three of the above events are represented a bit oddly from the point of view of the file spec:

       The parameter pitch_wheel for 'pitch_wheel_change' is a value -8192 to 8191, although the actual encoding
       of this is as a value 0 to 16,383, as per the spec.

       Sysex events are represented as either 'sysex_f0' or 'sysex_f7', depending on the status byte they are
       encoded with.

       'end_track' is a bit stranger, in that it is almost never actually found, or needed.  When the MIDI
       decoder sees an EOT (i.e., an end-track status: FF 2F 00) with a delta time of 0, it is ignored!  If in
       the unlikely event that it has a nonzero delta-time, it's decoded as a 'text_event' with whatever that
       delta-time is, and a zero-length text parameter.  (This happens before the 'event_callback' or
       'exclusive_event_callback' callbacks are given a crack at it.)  On the encoding side, an EOT is added to
       the end of the track as a normal part of the encapsulation of track data.

       I chose to add this special behavior so that you could add events to the end of a track without having to
       work around any track-final 'end_track' event.

       However, if you set "no_eot_magic" as a decoding parameter, none of this magic happens on the decoding
       side -- 'end_track' is decoded just as it is.

       And if you set "no_eot_magic" as an encoding parameter, then a track-final 0-length 'text_event' with
       non-0 delta-times is left as is.  Normally, such an event would be converted from a 'text_event' to an
       'end_track' event with thath delta-time.

       Normally, no user needs to use the "no_eot_magic" option either in encoding or decoding.  But it is
       provided in case you need your event LoL to be an absolutely literal representation of the binary data,
       and/or vice versa.

MIDI BNF

       For your reference (if you can make any sense of it), here is a copy of the MIDI BNF, as I found it in a
       text file that's been floating around the Net since the late 1980s.

       Note that this seems to describe MIDI events as they can occur in MIDI-on-the-wire.  I think that
       realtime data insertion (i.e., the ability to have <realtime byte>s popping up in the middle of messages)
       is something that can't happen in MIDI files.

       In fact, this library, as written, can't correctly parse MIDI data that has such realtime bytes inserted
       in messages.  Nor does it support representing such insertion in a MIDI event structure that's encodable
       for writing to a file.  (Although you could theoretically represent events with embedded <realtime byte>s
       as just "raw_data" events; but then, you can always stow anything at all in a "raw_data" event.)

        1.  <MIDI Stream> ::=           <MIDI msg> < MIDI Stream>
        2.  <MIDI msg> ::=              <sys msg> | <chan msg>
        3.  <chan msg> ::=              <chan 1byte msg> |
                                        | <chan 2byte msg>
        4.  <chan 1byte msg> ::=        <chan stat1 byte> <data singlet>
                                          <running singlets>
        5.  <chan 2byte msg> ::=        <chan stat2 byte> <data pair>
                                          <running pairs>
        6.  <chan stat1 byte> ::=       <chan voice stat1 nibble>
                                          <hex nibble>
        7.  <chan stat2 byte> ::=       <chan voice stat2 nibble>
                                          <hex nibble>
        8.  <chan voice stat1 nyble>::= C | D
        9.  <chan voice stat2 nyble>::= 8 | 9 | A | B | E
        10. <hex nyble> ::=             0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 |
                                        | 8 | 9 | A | B | C | D | E | F
        11. <data pair> ::=             <data singlet> <data singlet>
        12. <data singlet> ::=          <realtime byte> <data singlet> |
                                        | <data byte>
        13. <running pairs> ::=         <empty> | <data pair> <running pairs>
        14. <running singlets> ::=      <empty> |
                                        | <data singlet> <running singlets>
        15. <data byte> ::=             <data MSD> <hex nyble>
        16. <data MSD> ::=              0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7
        17. <realtime byte> ::=         F8 | FA | FB | FC | FE | FF
        18. <sys msg> ::=               <sys common msg> |
                                        | <sysex msg> |
                                        | <sys realtime msg>
        19. <sys realtime msg> ::=      <realtime byte>
        20. <sysex msg> ::=             <sysex data byte>
                                          <data singlet> <running singlets>
                                          <eox byte>
        21. <sysex stat byte> ::=       F0
        22. <eox byte> ::=              F7
        23. <sys common msg> ::=        <song position msg> |
                                        | <song select msg> |
                                        | <tune request>
        24. <tune request> ::=          F6
        25. <song position msg> ::=     <song position stat byte>
                                          <data pair>
        26. <song select msg> ::=       <song select stat byte>
                                          <data singlet>
        27. <song position stat byte>::=F2
        28. <song select stat byte> ::= F3

       Copyright (c) 1998-2005 Sean M. Burke. All rights reserved.

       This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl
       itself.

AUTHOR

       Sean M. Burke "sburke@cpan.org"  (Except the BNF -- who knows who's behind that.)