Replying to:amihartThis is pretty cool. I got me an AY-3-8912 recently and have been playing around with making music with it. What a coincidence.
Thanks, much appreciated.
Replying to:amihartThis is pretty cool. I got me an AY-3-8912 recently and have been playing around with making music with it. What a coincidence.
And the music data itself is stored as:
<the values of register 0 for every frame>, <register 1>, <resister 2>, ... <resister 13>
For register 13 specifically, it should be updated whenever the value is not 255 (rather than whenever its value changes)
Good job on the update! I love the new bottom screen design and the new feature!
Nice library of songs! š I like it!
I like all of these songs rn
For the better menu you might want to make it that you select the file from the folder or make it like a file explorer in the style of windows or an old DOS program
It was finally completed.
Supports only PSG files.
key:D3E3338S
You did a great job on this! Thank goodness I kept the older versions of the sound chip emulator.
>Killias12
Thank you.
Changed to be able to play VTX files (requires VTX.LIB).
key:7328YE9Y
VTX files are internally converted to PSG files.
Therefore, it takes time to start playback.
How do I remove the bottom controls in order to make the progress show on one display? Iām planning to port this to SB4 and make it into a subprogram so it runs in the background.
I recommend it if you want to put pretty cool 8-bit songs to your game. I highly recommend it to 8/4-bit fans!
Replying to:the_squat1115I recommend it if you want to put pretty cool 8-bit songs to your game. I highly recommend it to 8/4-bit fans!
This doesn't really work outside of the program, though.
Also 4-bit what
Replying to:the_squat1115I recommend it if you want to put pretty cool 8-bit songs to your game. I highly recommend it to 8/4-bit fans!
The 4-bits were used by the Atari, Intellivision, ColecoVision, and other ones.
Replying to:the_squat1115I recommend it if you want to put pretty cool 8-bit songs to your game. I highly recommend it to 8/4-bit fans!
No, those consoles were 8-bit.
Excluding the Atari 2600. That console is a 4-bit one.
There are no programmable video games systems that use 4-bit processors. Every system is at least an 8-bit.
Edit:However, the graphics ARE 7-bit.