The song speed is interpreted as beats per minute, which is equal to measures of 4/4 per minute. A window will pop up and ask you for the speed you want the song to have. If you want to have your song played faster, click the Tempo field. If Loop is disabled and the playback hits the end, the playback stops and the scrollbar is moved to the beginning of the song. If you enable the Loop button, your song will start over after it hits the end. If you want to play it from the beginning, you have to first move the scrollbar there. The song will start at the current position. While playing, use the Stop button to cancel playing. You can play a song by clicking the Play button below. Now you know the basics, let’s try and play a song. The single triangle appends 1 chord, the double triangle appends a whole window width of new chords. If you want to make your song longer, you can do that by moving to the end of the song and using the two buttons at the right side of the scrollbar. You can scroll through your song with the scrollbar at the very bottom of the main window. Of course, your song isn’t limited to 4 measures.
If you have a one-button mouse, you can only erase notes in the eraser mode.
Mac users: The AMS does make a difference between Ctrl+click and right click. You can then erase them with the left mouse button. When the eraser mode is enabled, your cursor will snap to nearby notes and mark them with a shadow. You can also enable the eraser mode by clicking the Erase button below. It will erase the uppermost note at your current mouse position.
You can erase notes with your right mouse button. Each chord will be at middle volume level when you create it. You can’t choose different volumes for two notes on the same chord. You can adjust how loud the notes of this chord are by clicking and dragging this bar. As soon as there’s at least one note in a chord, a green bar appears beneath it. You can only set notes at those vertical lines. The sharp or flat only applies to the note of the instrument you just set, not to other instruments that might have already been placed at the same place. You can also apply sharps and flats to a note - just hold the Shift or Ctrl button on your keyboard while setting the note. The possible note range goes from the low A to the high C. You can set multiple instruments at the same position if you want. When your instrument is chosen, click anywhere in the editing area to set a note of it there. The currently chosen instrument appears bigger than the others. Each one plays its sound when you click on it. So let’s get started making some music! You can choose your instrument from the ones shown at the top of the main window. The song will be played by Mario hopping on the chords. Its purpose is to create nice and wicked music pieces with samples of the original Mario Paint sequencer, or other samples from SoundFonts you can include yourself. I created it after seeing the limitations of the Mario Paint Composer, another remake done by unFun Games. The Advanced Mario Sequencer (AMS) is a reimplementation of the sequencer module of the SNES game Mario Paint. Support, making the macOS version useless on recent OS versions.
Since I have no access to the compiler anymore, I can’t update it with 64bit I wrote the AMS a long time ago in RealBasic. To provide a more user-friendly GUI with added and enhanced editing features. It was inspired by the Mario Paint Composer, but aims The Advanced Mario Sequencer is a remake of the sequencer feature from the old