is new.
A MidiChannel object represents a single MIDI channel. Generally, each MidiChannel method processes a like-named MIDI "channel voice" or "channel mode" message as defined by the MIDI specification. However, MidiChannel adds some "get" methods that retrieve the value most recently set by one of the standard MIDI channel messages. Similarly, methods for per-channel solo and mute have been added.
A Synthesizer object has a collection of MidiChannels, usually one for each of the 16 channels prescribed by the MIDI 1.0 specification. The Synthesizer generates sound when its MidiChannels receive noteOn messages.
See the MIDI 1.0 Specification for more information about the prescribed behavior of the MIDI channel messages, which are not exhaustively documented here. The specification is titled MIDI Reference: The Complete MIDI 1.0 Detailed Specification, and is published by the MIDI Manufacturer's Association ( http://www.midi.org ).
MIDI was originally a protocol for reporting the gestures of a keyboard musician. This genesis is visible in the MidiChannel API, which preserves such MIDI concepts as key number, key velocity, and key pressure. It should be understood that the MIDI data does not necessarily originate with a keyboard player (the source could be a different kind of musician, or software). Some devices might generate constant values for velocity and pressure, regardless of how the note was performed. Also, the MIDI specification often leaves it up to the synthesizer to use the data in the way the implementor sees fit. For example, velocity data need not always be mapped to volume and/or brightness.
| Method Summary | |
|---|---|
| void |
allNotesOff
() Turns off all notes that are currently sounding on this channel. |
| void |
allSoundOff
() Immediately turns off all sounding notes on this channel, ignoring the state of the Hold Pedal and the internal decay rate of the current Instrument. |
| void |
controlChange
(int controller, int value) Reacts to a change in the specified controller's value. |
| int |
getChannelPressure
() Obtains the channel's keyboard pressure. |
| int |
getController
(int controller) Obtains the current value of the specified controller. |
| boolean |
getMono
() Obtains the current mono/poly mode. |
| boolean |
getMute
() Obtains the current mute state for this channel. |
| boolean |
getOmni
() Obtains the current omni
mode.
|
| int |
getPitchBend
() Obtains the upward or downward pitch offset for this channel. |
| int |
getPolyPressure
(int noteNumber) Obtains the pressure with which the specified key is being depressed. |
| int |
getProgram
() Obtains the current program number for this channel. |
| boolean |
getSolo
() Obtains the current solo state for this channel. |
| boolean |
localControl
(boolean on) Turns local control on or off. |
| void |
noteOff
(int noteNumber) Turns the specified note off. |
| void |
noteOff
(int noteNumber, int velocity) Turns the specified note off. |
| void |
noteOn
(int noteNumber, int velocity) Starts the specified note sounding. |
| void |
programChange
(int program) Changes a program (patch). |
| void |
programChange
(int bank, int program) Changes the program using bank and program (patch) numbers. |
| void |
resetAllControllers
() Resets all the implemented controllers to their default values. |
| void |
setChannelPressure
(int pressure) Reacts to a change in the keyboard pressure. |
| void |
setMono
(boolean on) Turns mono mode on or off. |
| void |
setMute
(boolean mute) Sets the mute state for this channel. |
| void |
setOmni
(boolean on) Turns omni mode on or off. |
| void |
setPitchBend
(int bend) Changes the pitch offset for all notes on this channel. |
| void |
setPolyPressure
(int noteNumber, int pressure) Reacts to a change in the specified note's key pressure. |
| void |
setSolo
(boolean soloState) Sets the solo state for this channel. |
| Method Detail |
|---|
void noteOn(int noteNumber,
int velocity)
void noteOff(int noteNumber,
int velocity)
void noteOff(int noteNumber)
void setPolyPressure(int noteNumber,
int pressure)
It is possible that the underlying synthesizer does not support this MIDI message. In order to verify that setPolyPressure was successful, use getPolyPressure.
int getPolyPressure(int noteNumber)
If the device does not support setting poly pressure, this method always returns 0. Calling setPolyPressure will have no effect then.
void setChannelPressure(int pressure)
It is possible that the underlying synthesizer does not support this MIDI message. In order to verify that setChannelPressure was successful, use getChannelPressure.
int getChannelPressure()
If the device does not support setting channel pressure, this method always returns 0. Calling setChannelPressure will have no effect then.
amount of
pressure
for that note,
void controlChange(int controller,
int value)
The MIDI 1.0 Specification defines both 7-bit controllers and 14-bit controllers. Continuous controllers, such as wheels and sliders, typically have 14 bits (two MIDI bytes), while discrete controllers, such as switches, typically have 7 bits (one MIDI byte). Refer to the specification to see the expected resolution for each type of control.
Controllers 64 through 95 (0x40 - 0x5F) allow 7-bit precision. The value of a 7-bit controller is set completely by the value argument. An additional set of controllers provide 14-bit precision by using two controller numbers, one for the most significant 7 bits and another for the least significant 7 bits. Controller numbers 0 through 31 (0x00 - 0x1F) control the most significant 7 bits of 14-bit controllers; controller numbers 32 through 63 (0x20 - 0x3F) control the least significant 7 bits of these controllers. For example, controller number 7 (0x07) controls the upper 7 bits of the channel volume controller, and controller number 39 (0x27) controls the lower 7 bits. The value of a 14-bit controller is determined by the interaction of the two halves. When the most significant 7 bits of a controller are set (using controller numbers 0 through 31), the lower 7 bits are automatically set to 0. The corresponding controller number for the lower 7 bits may then be used to further modulate the controller value.
It is possible that the underlying synthesizer does not support a specific controller message. In order to verify that a call to controlChange was successful, use getController.
int getController(int controller)
If the device does not support setting a specific controller, this method returns 0 for that controller. Calling controlChange will have no effect then.
void programChange(int program)
The MIDI specification does not dictate whether notes that are already sounding should switch to the new instrument (timbre) or continue with their original timbre until terminated by a note-off.
The program number is zero-based (expressed from 0 to 127). Note that MIDI hardware displays and literature about MIDI typically use the range 1 to 128 instead.
It is possible that the underlying synthesizer does not support a specific program. In order to verify that a call to programChange was successful, use getProgram.
void programChange(int bank,
int program)
It is possible that the underlying synthesizer does not support a specific bank, or program. In order to verify that a call to programChange was successful, use getProgram and getController. Since banks are changed by way of control changes, you can verify the current bank with the following statement:
int bank = (getController(0) * 127) + getController(32);
int getProgram()
void setPitchBend(int bend)
The MIDI specification stipulates that pitch bend be a 14-bit value, where zero is maximum downward bend, 16383 is maximum upward bend, and 8192 is the center (no pitch bend). The actual amount of pitch change is not specified; it can be changed by a pitch-bend sensitivity setting. However, the General MIDI specification says that the default range should be two semitones up and down from center.
It is possible that the underlying synthesizer does not support this MIDI message. In order to verify that setPitchBend was successful, use getPitchBend.
int getPitchBend()
If the device does not support setting pitch bend, this method always returns 8192. Calling setPitchBend will have no effect then.
void resetAllControllers()
void allNotesOff()
void allSoundOff()
boolean localControl(boolean on)
It is possible that the underlying synthesizer does not support local control. In order to verify that a call to localControl was successful, check the return value.
the new local-control value, or false if local control is not supported
void setMono(boolean on)
"Mono" is short for the word "monophonic," which in this context is opposed to the word "polyphonic" and refers to a single synthesizer voice per MIDI channel. It has nothing to do with how many audio channels there might be (as in "monophonic" versus "stereophonic" recordings).
It is possible that the underlying synthesizer does not support mono mode. In order to verify that a call to setMono was successful, use getMono.
boolean getMono()
Synthesizers that do not allow changing mono/poly mode will always return the same value, regardless of calls to setMono.
void setOmni(boolean on)
The default is omni off. It is possible that the underlying synthesizer does not support omni mode. In order to verify that setOmni was successful, use getOmni.
boolean getOmni()
Obtains the current omni mode. Synthesizers that do not allow changing the omni mode will always return the same value, regardless of calls to setOmni.
false (meaning omni mode is off).
void setMute(boolean mute)
Unlike
allSoundOff()
, this method applies to only a specific channel, not to all channels. Further, it silences not only currently sounding notes, but also subsequently received notes.
It is possible that the underlying synthesizer does not support muting channels. In order to verify that a call to setMute was successful, use getMute.
boolean getMute()
If the underlying synthesizer does not support muting this channel, this method always returns false.
or
false if not void setSolo(boolean soloState)
It is possible that the underlying synthesizer does not support solo channels. In order to verify that a call to setSolo was successful, use getSolo.
#getSolo(boolean)
boolean getSolo()
If the underlying synthesizer does not support solo on this channel, this method always returns false.
the channel is solo, or