The Synthesis ToolKit in C++ (STK) By Perry R. Cook and Gary P. Scavone, 1995-2002. The Synthesis ToolKit in C++ can be used in a variety of ways, depending on your particular needs. Some people just choose the classes they need for a particular project and copy those to their project directory. Others like to compile and link to a library of object files. STK was not designed with one particular style of use in mind. To configure and compile (on Unix systems): 1. Unpack the STK distribution (tar -xzf stk-4.x.tar.gz). 2. From within the directory containing this file, run configure: ./configure 3. From within each project directory, type "make". 4. To compile a library of objects, type "make" from within the src directory. Several options can be passed to configure, including: --disable-realtime = only compile generic non-realtime classes --enable-debug = enable various debug output --with-alsa = choose native ALSA API support (linux only) --enable-midiator = enable native MS-124W MIDI support (linux only) Typing "./configure --help" will display all the available options. In addition, it is possible to specify the RAWWAVES and INCLUDE paths to configure as (ex. to set to /home/gary/rawwaves and /home/gary/include): ./configure RAWWAVE_PATH="/home/gary/rawwaves/" ./configure INCLUDE_PATH="/home/gary/include/" The ending "/" is required for the RAWWAVES path. The default behavior will set a relative path that works for the project files included with the distribution (assuming they are not moved). If you wish to use a different compiler than that selected by configure, specify that compiler in the command line (ex. to use CC): ./configure CXX=CC In addition, a linux RPM is available from the STK WWW site (http://www-ccrma.stanford.edu/software/stk/). For Windows Users: An STK distribution is available which contains precompiled executables. In addition, Visual C++ project files are included for each of the example STK projects.