![]() In our example ch1 fader has the address: We now want to rewrite the address to the OSC address used by the faders on our mixing console. As it stands this would now route the OSC message (/midi/cc50/1) in the main window to the default target (same address) You will see that this is checked in the second column as the default and that the default routing is now in the Routes table. (If there is a value already there clear it by selecting clear from the small gear menu next to it.) If the OSC service you want is not listed you can manually enter it’s IP address and port number by double-clicking in the OSC URL column. In our case, this is Touch OSC running on an iPad ![]() In Event type select OSC message, In value select New…Ĭlick the small gear icon in Target 1 and select the OSC server you want to send the OSC messages to. We now need to translate this address to the OSC address we need to drive our fader. Quite magically, Osculator immediately translates any MIDI message it receives, on an Active MIDI input, to an OSC address, and puts it in the main window. Make IAC Bus 1 (or whichever bus you are using) active. Open Osculator, create a new document, click the Parameters gearwheel and select I/O. Select a Channel, MIDI controller number and starting Control Value (0-127)Ĭheck ‘fade over duration’, set the duration of the fade, set the end value (0-127) and adjust the curve shape if required. Set MIDI Destination to an internal MIDI bus to send to OSCULATOR.
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