Hi Royce,
I hope you’re doing well.
I’ve been a big fan of the NDLR and of the NDLR Library software you developed. I know it has been a while since the software was last updated, and I wanted to reach out with a personal request.
I’m currently learning software development, and as a side project I would love to work on my own updated version of the NDLR Library for personal use. I am not looking to commercialize anything or turn it into a business. My main motivation is to learn, build on something I already care about, and keep improving my own workflow with the NDLR.
Because of that, I wanted to ask whether you would be open to sharing the source code with me. It would save me from having to start completely from scratch and would give me a meaningful project to learn from. Of course, I would fully respect any conditions you would want to put around it.
I completely understand if this is not something you’re comfortable sharing, but I thought it was worth asking directly.
Thanks again for creating such a great tool and for all the work you’ve put into the NDLR ecosystem.
Hi Dorian, Thanks. I'm glad…
Hi Dorian,
Thanks. I'm glad you like it.
I'm not sure what you are writing in, but the code is written in the language Free Pascal that is inside an IDE called Lazarus.
I choose this because Lazarus is relatively easy to develop for PC and port to Mac and Linux.
If I were to do it again I would use C++ and an great music/audio library called "Juce" (free for personal use) and for some one setting out, it is a great part of a C++ toolchain to use now and in the future.
As far as NDLR code is concerned, it is full of Conductive Labs proprietary information and so I am not able to give it to you without their permission. Sorry.
All the best
Royce