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- *********************** New Undocumented Features **********************
-
- 1. Several features were added to this release but were not
- finished in time for the online manual. When choosing patches
- in the Composer, a Sample button is now available that allows
- you to hear the patches you are choosing.
-
- 2. When printing, there is a feature in the print options box
- called left and right scaling which allows you to decide how
- many notes the Composer tries to fit on a line when printing.
- If it can't fit a whole measure on a line, it won't use it.
- This setting allows you to decide how much it tries to fit.
- A lower number means it tries to fit more, a higher number
- means less.
-
- 3. You can now drag grid marks by holding down the Shift Key on your
- computer keyboard and pressing and holding the right mouse button.
- This is useful if you wish to expand or compress an area of music so
- that you can change its formatting when it prints. You should wait
- until you have finished entering in all of the notes in a given measure
- because a change in grid resolution could reformat the measure and
- undo your work.
-
- 4. There is now a checkbox in the Print dialog box that allows
- you to decide whether you want to print Tempo marks or not.
-
- 5. There is a file that is installed in your WinSong Directory
- titled W3MANUAL.WRI. It allows you to print the manual all at
- once instead of one screen at a time.
-
- 6. The TapeDeck Edit features now work differently. If you are viewing the
- TapeDeck at the track level, most edit functions will pull up a dialog
- box that allows you to enter in the beginning and ending times of an
- edit and let you set the parameters of an edit. If you are viewing
- the TapeDeck at the event list level, this dialog box will not appear,
- the edit function will happen to all of the notes that have been
- highlighted.
-
-
-
- ******************** MIDI DRIVER PROBLEMS ******************************
-
- 1. IF YOU ARE USING THE WINSONG MULTIMEDIA MIDI DRIVER,
- be sure that you have installed the proper midi driver
- for your card in Windows 3.1. You can tell what midi
- drivers are installed in Windows by double clicking on
- the Control Panel Icon. A window will open up with
- more icons, including one called "Drivers" that has a
- little keyboard and drums in it. Double Click on the
- Drivers Icon and a list of the currently installed
- drivers will pop up. Make sure the MIDI Mapper and
- and the appropriate driver for your card is on that list.
- If it is not, click the Add button and add the appropriate
- driver. Some drivers will ask you the port and IRQ settings
- for your card. Make sure these match the ones on
- your card (see the instructions for your card for
- details). You must also make sure that you have the
- Midi Mapper Driver installed on your system.
-
- Next, you must make sure that the Windows 3.1 Midi Mapper
- is configured properly. Close the Driver window and
- double click on the Midi Mapper Icon. The window will
- have the name of the current Midi Mapper setup you are
- using. Click the Edit button to see what midi device
- each midi channel is mapped to. A list of Midi channels
- will pop up. Make sure the port for each Midi channel
- has the name of your card in it. Hit the OK button
- when you are done, then hit the close button in the Midi
- Mapper window.
-
- NOTE: A section to the On-Line Manual has been added that
- tries to explain the Windows MIDI Mapper. If you don't
- understand it, try reading this.
-
- Now try running any of the WinSong 3.0 programs and
- see if they work properly. If they don't, it is likely
- that the port or IRQ settings for your card don't match
- the ones on the driver, or that you have a port or
- IRQ conflict with another card on the system.
-
- 2. Many users have a SoundBlaster or compatible card and wish
- to use its ability to play midi with its internal sounds
- rather than through the midi port. To do this, make sure
- that the Ad Lib driver is installed in the driver list found
- when opening the Drivers Icon. Go to the Midi Mapper and
- select the Ad Lib driver on the midi channels you wish to
- play using the SoundBlaster's internal voices. If you wish
- to play through the Midi port, use the Creative Labs driver.
-
- 3. There are problems with the Creative Labs SoundBlaster 1.0
- driver that came with Windows 3.1. It erroneously tells
- WinSong that the Midi Mapper is being used by another program.
- Either use the Creative Labs SoundBlaster 1.5 Driver, the
- Ad Lib Driver or get an updated driver from Creative Labs.
- WinSong will attempt to bypass the Midi Mapper when it is in
- use. It will use the first available midi device.
-
- 4. If you have more than one midi card on the system and wish
- wish to use a different card for midi input, you will have to
- add the line "INDEVICE=n" to your W3.INI file, located in the
- WinSong Directory. (n is the number of the device you wish to
- use). By default, WinSong uses the first one available
- (usually number 0). Try different numbers until you find
- the one that works. Some versions of the SoundBlaster come
- with drivers that tell WinSong that there are two input devices
- in the system event though there is only one card. If you can
- play MIDI out of the SoundBlaster but can't play into it,
- try adding the line "INDEVICE=1" to the W3.INI file.
-
-
- 5. IF YOU ARE USING THE WINSONG ROLAND MPU-401 MIDI DRIVER,
- and it isn't working for you, there are several things
- to check. First, make sure that the port and IRQ settings
- that you gave in the WinSong install program match the
- settings on your card. If the port setting is wrong,
- you will get a message when starting a WinSong program
- that the port could not be initialized and that no midi
- functions will work. If the IRQ setting is wrong, you
- get a message that says WinSong can't hook the IRQ you have
- selected.
-
- If the settings you gave match the settings on your card,
- but you still get the message that the port could not be
- initialized, the port gets jammed up from using another
- program. If that is the case, exit Windows, then turn
- off your computer ( don't just reboot it ), and then turn
- it on again. That should alleviate the problem.
-
- If your IRQ settings are correct, but you still get the
- message that WinSong can't hook the IRQ you have selected,
- the most likely problem is that the Windows 3.1 MPU-401 driver
- has been loaded into memory. In that case, the WinSong driver
- may not function. The cure is to remove the Windows driver and
- restart Windows, or use the WinSong Multi-Media driver and
- process midi through the Midi Mapper.
-
- If that is not the case then you probably need to change
- the IRQ setting on your card. IRQ numbers 2, 7, or 9
- seem to work the best. Change your card, then reinstall
- WinSong 3.0 and give the new IRQ settings when it asks you
- to. This should cure the problem.
-
- If you still can't get it to work properly, try switching
- drivers and using the WinSong MultiMedia midi driver, and
- set the Midi Mapper to route everything out the
- Roland MPU-401 driver. Make sure to add the driver by
- running the Drivers Program in the Control Panel.
-
- 6. If you want to use WinSong to dump sequences to an external
- sequencer, and need to sync the two together, the WinSong
- Roland MPU-401 driver is the only one that reliably sends
- out MIDI start, stop and timing pulses.
-
- 7. Some cards do not have sounds built into them and must load
- them from disk before they are available. Patch caching loads
- the sounds onto the card. If you are using a sound card that
- requires patch caching, or you want to use the patch caching feature
- of your card, add the line "PATCHCACHE=1" to the W3.INI file in
- the WinSong directory. This feature may cause a delay before playing
- or may change the sounds on your card so you should leave it off
- unless you need it. Another similar feature is called drum caching.
- Some cards need to have the drums sounds loaded before they are
- available. In that case add the line "DRUMCACHE=1" to the W3.INI
- file.
-
- If you have an Advanced Gravis UltraSound card, you can add the line
- ULTRASOUND=127 to the W3.INI file. This will load the patches and
- the drums and will give them a volume of 127.
-
- The driver only checks the first first patches on a track to see
- which ones need to be loaded onto the card (for speed reasons),
- so the first event on any track should be a patch change in order
- to guarantee that the sound will be available when it is needed.
- If you wish to change patches during the course of a track,
- make the first few events patch changes and make sure all the
- patches that you need are there.
-
-
- 8. Some MIDI drivers for Windows do not support running status bytes.
- WinSong now sends a status byte with every message by default. You
- can increase the throughput on your MIDI system by adding the line
- "RUNNINGSTATUS=1" to your W3.INI file. This tells WinSong to only
- send the necessary status bytes out the MIDI driver.
-
-
-
- /********************* PRINTING PROBLEMS *************************/
-
- 1. If you try to print and get this message:
-
- "Can't Load Fonts Necessary for Printing"
-
- Be sure that Windows has TRUETYPE fonts enabled. You
- can check this by running the Control Panel, and then
- running the Fonts program. Click the TrueType button
- and a window will appear that says:
-
- "Enable TrueType Fonts"
-
- Make sure the box next to it is checked. Some add-on
- font managers turn this off.
-
- 2. If you try to print and all you get is a bunch of regular
- (non-musical) characters scattered all over the page, the
- most likely reason is that you are using an add-on font
- manager that is confusing WinSong. Naturally we want to
- make WinSong compatible with everything, but sometimes
- this just isn't possible. Until then, you may have to
- turn your font manager off when printing in WinSong.
-
- The next most likely reason this would happen is that you
- have too many fonts loaded into Windows and WinSong is
- unable to load its own fonts (which are not installed
- in Windows but are in the WinSong directory).
-
- Another thing to check is the settings of the Windows printer
- driver you are using. An example is the PostScript printer
- driver. If you select the Print Setup menu option in WinSong,
- there is a button named Options. If you press that button,
- another window appears with another button called Advanced.
- There is a checkbox that says:
-
- "Use Printer Fonts for all TrueType Fonts"
-
- If this box is checked, Windows will not use the WinSong
- Music font and it is very unlikely that your printer has
- a suitable substitute.
-
- What we're getting at is that you may have your printer
- driver set up so that it will not get the WinSong font
- when WinSong prints, and you may have to do a lot of
- hacking in order to find out why. This is another one
- of the millions of computer problems that take a good deal
- of time to solve, but once solved will probably not
- trouble you again.
-
- 3. Using the scaling features when printing may cause symbols
- and lines to not align properly.
-
- 4. If you print and at the bottom of the page symbols are missing,
- you may not have enough memory in your printer to download
- all of the necesary fonts. This usually occurs in laser printers
- such as the HP LaserJet IIP. The best solution is to add memory
- to your printer, but a cheaper solution is to try changing the
- settings in the Printer Setup. Try checking the "Print True-Type
- as Graphics" button. This can slow printing and will affect the
- other programs you use besides WinSong.
-
-
-
-
- ******************* General MIDI Instrument List ************************
-
- Here are the sounds that should go with a particular patch on a sound card
- or synthesizer. Some cards are not designed to conform to this list. You
- can create a patch map in the MIDI Mapper that remaps the sounds on your
- synthesizer to these patch numbers:
-
-
- Piano Strings Synth Lead
- 1. Acoustic Piano 41. Violin 81. Lead 1 Square
- 2. Brt Acou Piano 42. Viola 82. Lead 2 Sawtooth
- 3. Elec Grnd Piano 43. Cello 83. Lead 3 Calliope
- 4. Honky Tonk 44. Contrabass 84. Lead 4 Chiff
- 5. Elec Piano 1 45. Tremolo Strings 85. Lead 5 Charang
- 6. Elec Piano 2 46. Pizz. Strings 86. Lead 6 Voice
- 7. Harpsichord 47. Orch. Strings 87. Lead 7 Fifths
- 8. Clavichord 48. Timpani 88. Lead 8 Bass+Ld
-
- Chrom. Percussion Ensemble Synth Pad
- 9. Celesta 49. String Ens. 1 89. Pad 1 New Age
- 10. Glockenspiel 50. String Ens. 2 90. Pad 2 Warm
- 11. Music box 51. Synth Strings 1 91. Pad 3 Polysynth
- 12. Vibraphone 52. Synth Strings 2 92. Pad 4 Choir
- 13. Marimba 53. Choir Aahs 93. Pad 5 Bowed
- 14. Xylophone 54. Voice Oohs 94. Pad 6 Metallic
- 15. Tubular Bells 55. Synth Voice 95. Pad 7 Halo
- 16. Dulcimer 56. Orchestra Hit 96. Pad 8 Sweep
-
- Organ Brass Synth F/X
- 17. Drawbar Organ 57. Trumpet 97. FX1 Rain
- 18. Perc. Organ 58. Trombone 98. FX2 Soundtrack
- 19. Rock Organ 59. Tuba 99. FX3 Crystal
- 20. Church Organ 60. Muted Trumpet 100. FX4 Atmosphere
- 21. Reed Organ 61. French Horn 101. FX5 Brightness
- 22. Accordian 62. Brass Section 102. FX6 Goblins
- 23. Harmonica 63. Synth Brass 1 103. FX7 Echoes
- 24. Tango Accordian 64. Synth Brass 2 104. FX8 Sci-Fi
-
- Guitar Reed Ethnic
- 25. Acoustic Guitar 65. Soprano Sax 105. Sitar
- 26. Steel Acou Guit 66. Alto Sax 106. Banjo
- 27. El Guitar Jazz 67. Tenor Sax 107. Shamisen
- 28. Electric Guitar 68. Baritone Sax 108. Koto
- 29. El Guitar Muted 69. Oboe 109. Kalimba
- 30. Overdriven Guit 70. English Horn 110. Bagpipe
- 31. Distortion Guit 71. Bassoon 111. Fiddle
- 32. Guitar Harmonic 72. Clarinet 112. Shanai
-
- Bass Pipe Percussive
- 33. Acoustic Bass 73. Piccolo 113. Tinkle Bell
- 34. El Bass Finger 74. Flute 114. Agogo
- 35. El Bass Pick 75. Recorder 115. Steel Drums
- 36. Fretless Bass 76. Pan Flute 116. Woodblock
- 37. Slap Bass 1 77. Blown Bottle 117. Taiko Drum
- 38. Slap Bass 2 78. Shakuhachi 118. Melodic Tom
- 39. Synth Bass 1 79. Whistle 119. Synth Drum
- 40. Synth Bass 2 80. Ocarina 120. Reverse Cymbal
-
- Sound F/X Sound F/X
- 121. Guit Fret Noise
- 122. Breath Noise
- 123. Seashore
- 124. Bird Tweet
- 125. Telephone Ring
- 126. Helicopter
- 127. Applause
- 128. Gunshot
-
-