(fluxus) learning curve

I'm trying to have some fun with fluxus, but his manual and online docs all seem to suggest that the reader is already an expert network programmer who has never heard of the Scheme before. Therefore, you get passages that try to explain the very basics of prefix notation, but suppose you know how to transfer sound card data to a program, or configure and connect to the OSC process.

Is there any textbook that goes the other way around? IE, it is assumed that you already have a Lisp / Scheme object descriptor, but you need some pointers before you can properly configure your sound sources or OSC server?

Is it possible for anyone to learn how to get (for example) a system microphone for connecting to (fluxus) or how to make him play an audio file from a disk?

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To connect the system microphone to fluxus, you need software to communicate and receive data on your sound card, for example, jackpilot http://www.jackosx.com/about.html

Once you have installed on your computer (in this case Mac):

  • go to system preferences / audio ... in audio IN, you need to select your microphone

  • strart jackpilot

  • in the settings jackpilot also tunes the audio IN to the microphone.

  • enter a buffer size of 1024 and a sampling rate of 44100

  • save (jackpilot) and run the run

  • open fluxus

  • try this little code

    (clear) (start-audio "" 1024 44100) (define (something) (rotate (vector (gh 0) (gh 5) (gh 15))) (draw-cube) ) (every-frame (something)) 

If you need the same info on linux, tell me.

If you need to do the same on windows ... windows do not support audio.

I hope this information will work for you.

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