![]() Fortunately, I got better at it as I wrote this review. While I believe StaffPad near-perfectly conceived, it's hand writing recognition is a headache to use at times, and it needs to improve a lot in this area for me to consider it rock-solid-dependable. It legitimizes the platform by being a tool that executes tasks that no other computing device can. It is a best-of-class example of what a professional 'iPad-first' app should look like. It is elegantly designed, astoundingly intuitive, and makes exactly the right trade-off for what a teacher would and would not need in a pro-level score editor. StaffPad is an exceptional tool for music educators. TL DR: If you want to skip this review, I'll get to the point: If you want a very balanced and comprehensive review of all the StaffPad features, not just the ones I depended on, I strongly recommend you check out the Scoring Notes review by David MacDonald. Writing short folk melodies to use in our sectional curriculum Reconstructing missing flute parts from my music library using the original scoreĪrranging extra percussion parts for works that are sparse in percussion writing I consider myself to be testing it largely from the perspective of a music educator, specifically a middle school band director, which means that I am doing things like. I have been beta testing StaffPad for the past month. Though it has taken many years, the StaffPad team has been hard at work, and the product is now available for iOS. When the iPad Pro launched months later, I thought "surely StaffPad will now be possible." Turns out I was right. There were only third party options, and none of them leveraged the operating system for the level of accuracy that the Apple Pencil now provides. The iPad was (and is) widely held as a superior tablet for consumer and professional use, but iOS did not have proper stylus support at the time. It was a tough pill to swallow, but I understood. My amazement was immediately followed by frustration when I leaned this was a Windows only product. Applications that convert handwriting to music notation were not widespread yet and I was absolutely shocked by the demo videos. Run $ irealb_parser json file.txt against the file.I remember seeing the introduction of StaffPad for Windows Surface tablets back in 2015. Take decoded contents and save it to a text file. ![]() Go to a URL decoder like this, paste the entire string in there, but remove the “irealb://” prefix. What you have copied is the URL-encoded contents of the text we need to process. Various iRealB links are available on the iRealB forums.įind a link, and copy link to the clipboard. $ irealb_parser json file.txt How to Get a File ¶ ↑ ![]() The gem comes with a single thor task “chords-json” that will take a file containing the iReal B chords format and convert it to chords-json ( /rubiety/chords-json). I welcome contributions to get this gem updated to parsing the new iRealB format. Though the delimeters seem largely the same, the actual chords changes are encoded in some way. Sometime within the past year iRealB changed their file format, and it’s now much less straightforward. NOTE: Broken with new iRealB File Format! ¶ ↑ Parses the iReal B chords format and outputs chords-json. ![]()
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