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Launching
We can launch Audiveris in different manners.
From a file explorer window, by double-clicking on one of these files located in bin
sub-folder
of the installation folder:
-
Audiveris.bat
-
Audiveris.sh
Nota: For a double-click to work, the file extension (here
.bat
or.sh
) must have been registered to point to proper OS application.
Note also that thisAudiveris.sh
file is just a renamed copy ofAudiveris
file located in thebin
sub-folder, precisely to benefit from a.sh
extension.
From a terminal window, by typing a command like ($>
figures the command prompt):
-
$> gradle run
(Assuming you are in the development folder) -
$> path\to\bin\Audiveris.bat
(Windows, pointing to file in installation folder) -
$> path/to/bin/Audiveris
(Unix-like, pointing to file in installation folder)
All the commands above will simply launch the application in interactive mode (a basic GUI) and with default parameters.
Suppose we want to run Audiveris in batch on an input file named "my file.pdf"
and export the result in MusicXML format into a folder named "my output folder"
.
[mind the spaces in input file name and in output folder name!]
We could use this command (syntax is the same for Windows and Unix-like, the optional "--" introduces inputs):
$> path\to\bin\Audiveris.bat -batch -export -output "my output folder" -- "my file.pdf"
However, if the application is launched via the gradle
tool (which in turn will run
Audiveris
application), we need a way to pass some arguments not to gradle
but to the application launched
by gradle
.
We do this by setting the specific project variable cmdLineArgs
, as follows:
$> gradle run -PcmdLineArgs="-batch,-export,-output,my output folder,--,my file.pdf"
Notice that for a launch via gradle
, the arguments separator is a comma (,
), not a space,
and the whole argument string must be surrounded by quotes if any argument contains a space.
The space is not a separator, hence we need a comma between -output
and my output folder
arguments. And no argument should have a heading or trailing space.
Similarly, JVM arguments can also be provided via the gradle
launch, using a
-PjvmLineArgs=...
construction.
For example, to use 3 gigabytes of memory:
$> gradle run -PjvmLineArgs=-Xmx3g
Software licensed under the GNU Affero General Public License (AGPL) Version 3
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