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  2. Comparison of scorewriters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_scorewriters

    Non-free Windows, macOS TuxGuitar: Yes Yes MIDI TuxGuitar, [ba] MusicXML, [c] MIDI, [d] Guitar Pro (versions 1–6), [t] Power Tab, [v] TablEdit [w] MIDI, [d] Guitar Pro (versions 3–5), [t] LilyPond, [e] ASCII tab, [u] PDF: Julian Gabriel Casadesus 1.6.6; 27 December 2024 (1 month ago) () LGPL-2.1-only: No cost: Windows, macOS, Linux, FreeBSD ...

  3. Comparison of MIDI editors and sequencers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_MIDI_editors...

    Software Platform License Developer Editing interface Notes Aegis Sonix: Amiga: Proprietary: Aegis Development Score, keyboard, and an instrument editor

  4. TuxGuitar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TuxGuitar

    TuxGuitar is a free and open-source tablature editor, which includes features such as tablature editing, score editing, and import and export of Guitar Pro gp3, gp4, and gp5 files. [3] In addition, TuxGuitar's tablature and staff interfaces function as basic MIDI editors.

  5. Rosegarden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosegarden

    Rosegarden is a free software digital audio workstation program developed for Linux with ALSA, JACK and Qt4. It acts as an audio and MIDI sequencer, scorewriter, and musical composition and editing tool. [4] It is intended to be a free alternative to such applications as Cubase.

  6. List of music software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_music_software

    This is a list of software for creating, performing, learning, analyzing, researching, broadcasting and editing music. This article only includes software, not services.

  7. MuseScore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MuseScore

    MuseScore Studio (branded as MuseScore before 2024) [8] is a free and open-source music notation program for Windows, macOS, and Linux under the Muse Group, which owns the associated online score-sharing platform MuseScore.com and a freemium mobile score viewer and playback app.

  8. Standard Widget Toolkit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_Widget_Toolkit

    The first Java GUI toolkit was the Abstract Window Toolkit (AWT), introduced with Java Development Kit (JDK) 1.0 as one component of Sun Microsystems' Java platform. The original AWT was a simple Java wrapper library around native (operating system-supplied) widgets such as menus, windows, and buttons.

  9. MusEdit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Musedit

    MusEdit allows the user to produce professional-quality music scores for all kinds of solo instruments, ensembles and orchestras. The music files can be played back, printed, exported as graphics and used to generate MIDI files and text tab. Musedit can also import MIDI files and text tab.