I am trying to write my own DAW, mostly just to learn about the mathematics of how signals are processed to get effects, but also for fun. (A rather large undertaking, but I have the time at the moment). I would like for it to work something like Propellerhead’s Record as in the rack especially.
I’m running on a Mac, so I’m thinking of using Audio Units for the different parts, then Core Audio for the scaffolding parts. So, the whole thing would be written in C or Obj-C.
However, I haven’t used either Audio Units or Core-Audio before, and the internet hasn’t been any help for learning.
Does anyone know where I could learn about these?
Or would Java (The only other language I’d feel comfortable using) be better, or is there something I’ve completely missed while trying to find the “easy” way to do this?
Thanks,
Jon
if you want to write a DAW:
at minimum, get your feet wet with an existing project. if i were to personally choose a project, i’d contribute to Ardour.
the signal processing in a DAW is relatively simple. you’ll have to work with mixers, files, and graphics. if you’re already comfortable writing apps, then you probably won’t learn much (beyond the basics). of course, you could find an existing project and extend it with features which relate to what you want to learn; you could write plugs or visualizations for it.
if prefer to work with signal processing:
language:
objc is not usable for realtime audio rendering.
java is very unusual for this application. there are actually wrappers for AUs and CoreAudio… but can’t name one commercial Java AU for OS X.
most audio shops (that I know of) are using C++ – not C. (Hardware is different). this really seems like an odd omission from your list – most DAWs and plugins use C++, and that is the language you’d find the most examples in. if you’re already comfortable with C and Java, I’d recommend coming to terms with C++ because that’s the standard language in the industry when targeting desktops.