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XMF

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

XMF (Extensible Music Format) is a tree-based digital container format used to bundle music-oriented content, such as a MIDI file and optionally the sounds it uses, liner notes or other content grouped by language-codes.

The first XMF definitions were to allow the bundling of a musical performance with the musical sounds used. For instance, a MIDI file could be stored together with a Downloadable Sounds file, and both files would travel together inside one XMF file. This specific use of an XMF file is referred to as XMF File Type 0 (streaming) or XMF File Type 1 (non-streaming), depending on whether the type of the MIDI file is 0 or 1, respectively.

There are currently five XMF File Types defined. The latest of which is XMF File Type 4 (counted from zero) and is called Interactive XMF (iXMF).[1]

The specifications for the XMF were first published in 2001 by the MMA.[2]

Features

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  • Resources can be referenced internally (in the XMF file) or referenced externally using a URI.
  • Resources can be country- and language-coded so that text could be shown in the right language depending on context.
  • Resources can be compressed using ZLIB.
  • Size information is stored using variable-length quantities, ensuring that the format can support an infinite number, while at the same time saving storage space.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "XMF Specification (All)". Retrieved 2017-10-19.
  2. ^ "MMA Announcement". Archived from the original on January 20, 2012.
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