THE INJECTOR DESK ACCESSORY from the Caged Artist Users guide copyright (C) 1988 Caged Artist Productions Program by Robert J. Melvin and David A. Grunberg Users guide by David A. Grunberg and Robert J. Melvin Introduction... The Injector desk accessory is a utility which allows you to read Caged Artist Editor synth files and load them into synthesizers, all from the GEM desktop. The Injector is always resident in memory, and can be called up at any time without leaving the main program. This is very handy if you are using a sequencer program, for instance. Installing the Injector accessory... Copy the file 'INJECTOR.AC' to a disk you normally boot from. If you use a hard disk, this is probably disk C (If you boot your hard disk from a floppy disk, copy the file to your floppy disk). Then rename the file to 'INJECTOR.ACC' (add a 'C' on the end). You can do this by single clicking on 'INJECTOR.AC', then selecting 'show info...' from the file menu. Important: The file 'INJECTOR.RSC' must be copied to the same boot disk as 'INJECTOR.ACC', and must not be in a subdirectory (folder). The file 'INJECTOR.SET' should also be copied to the boot disk, except if you have a hard disk which you are booting from a floppy disk, in which case it should be copied to the hard disk (drive C). Re-booting the computer will now install the Injector accessory. Warning: This, or any other desk accessory, will only work with GEM/menu based programs. Some non-GEM programs may not load or may crash if the Injector accessory is loaded. Using Injector... To call up the Injector, select 'Injector' from the desk menu. The main dialog box will appear. The left side contains a list of instruments currently supported. Each instrument has a Midi channel that you can set with the cursor and number keys to match your own setup. You can select an instrument with the mouse. On the right is a group of selector buttons. The functions are described below: Load Instrument Loads a synth MIDI file (Caged Artist format only) from disk and sends it to the selected instrument. A file selector box appears that lets you select the file to be loaded. The file name will appear next to the instrument under the 'File' heading. Load Config Loads a previously saved configuration of files into all synthesizers in your setup (see Save Config). If you set a MIDI channel to 0 (zero), Load Config will ignore that particular instrument, even if a file for it exists in the configuration file. Use this feature if you want to make sure that a particular instrument is never changed. See note (*). Save Config Saves the current configuration of files that were loaded with Load Instrument. A file selector box will appear that allows you to select or change the name of the configuration to be saved. * Note: All synth MIDI files which are in a configuration must be on the same disk to which you save the configuration. It is recommended that you use one disk for all synth files and configurations, to avoid confusion. Save Channels Saves your current setting of all MIDI channels. If you don't use a hard disk, you must put your original boot disk (the one with INJECTOR.ACC, INJECTOR.RSC and INJECTOR.SET on it) into drive A before saving. This will insure that your channel settings will be loaded in whenever you re-boot the computer. The settings are saved in the file INJECTOR.SET. Exit Closes Injector and returns you to the main program or GEM desktop. The 'Return' key does the same. SPECIAL NOTE FOR MT-32 AND D-110 USERS: If you use program changes in your sequence, remember to load a Timbre Table which maps program changes to the internal tones (such as MEMORYB.MTP on the program disk). Otherwise, all you will be able to hear are presets. (A Timbre Table is called "Patch Bank" in MT-32 lingo.) Also, note that the "Channel" on the Injector's screen should be set to the "Unit Number" on the instrument (between 17-32). Last but not least, the mid-88 release of Injector sent stuff too fast for the MT-32 and D-10/20/110, so make sure you are using the most recent version (October '88 or later).