Welcome to Praat! Praat is a speech analysis tool used for doing phonetics by computer. Praat can analyse, synthesize, and manipulate speech, and create high-quality pictures for your publications. Praat was created by Paul Boersma and David Weenink of the Institute of Phonetics Sciences of the University of Amsterdam.
Some of Praat’s most prominent features are:
Praat allows you to analyze different aspects of speech including pitch, formant, intensity, and voice quality. You have access to spectrograms (a visual representation of sound changing over time) and cochleagrams (a specific type of spectrogram more closely resembling how the inner ear receives sound).
Praat allows you to generate speech from a pitch curve and filters that you create (acoustic synthesis), or from muscle activities (articulatory synthesis).
Praat gives you the ability to modify existing speech utterances. You can alter pitch, intensity, and duration of speech.
Praat allows you to custom-label your samples using the IPA (International Phonetics Alphabet), and annotate your sound segments based on the particular variables you are seeking to analyze. Multi-language text-to-speech facilities allow you to segment the sound into words and phonemes.
With Praat, you can try out Optimality-Theoretic and Harmonic-Grammar learning, as well as several kinds of neural-network models.
Praat allows you to perform several statistical techniques, among which multidimensional scaling, principal component analysis, and discriminant analysis.
For more information, consult the website praat.org, which has Praat tutorials in several languages.
While the Praat website contains the latest executable for all platforms that we support (or used to support), the releases on GitHub contain many older executables as well.
The meaning of the names of binary files available on GitHub is as follows (editions that currently receive updates are in bold):
praatXXXX_win64.zip
: zipped executable for 64-bit Windows ( XP and higher, or 7 and higher)praatXXXX_win32.zip
: zipped executable for 32-bit Windows ( XP and higher, or 7 and higher)praatconXXXX_win64.zip
: zipped executable for 64-bit Windows, console editionpraatconXXXX_win32.zip
: zipped executable for 32-bit Windows, console editionpraatconXXXX_win32sit.exe
: self-extracting StuffIt archive with executable for 32-bit Windows, console editionpraatXXXX_win98.zip
: zipped executable for Windows 98praatXXXX_win98sit.exe
: self-extracting StuffIt archive with executable for Windows 98
praatXXXX_mac.dmg
: disk image with universal executable for (64-bit) Intel and Apple Silicon Macs (Cocoa)praatXXXX_xcodeproj.zip
: zipped Xcode project file for the universal (64-bit) edition (Cocoa)praatXXXX_mac64.dmg
: disk image with executable for 64-bit Intel Macs (Cocoa)praatXXXX_xcodeproj64.zip
: zipped Xcode project file for the 64-bit edition (Cocoa)praatXXXX_mac32.dmg
: disk image with executable for 32-bit Intel Macs (Carbon)praatXXXX_xcodeproj32.zip
: zipped Xcode project file for the 32-bit edition (Carbon)praatXXXX_macU.dmg
: disk image with universal executable for (32-bit) PPC and Intel Macs (Carbon)praatXXXX_macU.sit
: StuffIt archive with universal executable for (32-bit) PPC and Intel Macs (Carbon)praatXXXX_macU.zip
: zipped universal executable for (32-bit) PPC and Intel Macs (Carbon)praatXXXX_macX.zip
: zipped executable for MacOS X (PPC)praatXXXX_mac9.sit
: StuffIt archive with executable for MacOS 9praatXXXX_mac9.zip
: zipped executable for MacOS 9praatXXXX_mac7.sit
: StuffIt archive with executable for MacOS 7
praatXXXX_rpi_armv7.tar.gz
: gzipped tarred executable for 32-bit Linux on the Raspberry Pi 4B (GTK 2 or 3)praatXXXX_chrome64.tar.gz
: gzipped tarred executable for 64-bit Linux on Chromebooks (GTK 2 or 3)praatXXXX_linux64barren.tar.gz
: gzipped tarred executable for 64-bit Linux, without GUI or graphicspraatXXXX_linux64nogui.tar.gz
: gzipped tarred executable for 64-bit Linux, without GUI but with graphics (Cairo and Pango)praatXXXX_linux64.tar.gz
: gzipped tarred executable for 64-bit Linux (GTK 2 or 3)praatXXXX_linux32.tar.gz
: gzipped tarred executable for 32-bit Linux (GTK 2)praatXXXX_linux_motif64.tar.gz
: gzipped tarred executable for 64-bit Linux (Motif)praatXXXX_linux_motif32.tar.gz
: gzipped tarred executable for 32-bit Linux (Motif)praatXXXX_solaris.tar.gz
: gzipped tarred executable for Solaris
You need the Praat source code only in the following cases:
- you want to extend Praat’s functionality by adding C or C++ code to it; or
- you want to understand or reuse Praat’s source code; or
- you want to compile Praat for a computer for which we do not provide binary executables, e.g. Linux for some non-Intel computers, FreeBSD, HP-UX, SGI, or SPARC Solaris.
Before trying to dive into Praat’s source code, you should be familiar with the working of the Praat program and with writing Praat scripts. The Praat program can be downloaded from https://praat.org.
All of the code is available on GitHub under the GNU General Public License. Of course, any improvements are welcomed by the authors.
To download the latest source code of Praat from GitHub, click on the zip or tar.gz archive at the latest release, or fork ("clone") the praat/praat repository at any later change.
First make sure that the source code can be compiled as is.
Then add your own buttons by editing main/main_Praat.cpp
or fon/praat_Fon.cpp
.
Consult the manual page on Programming.
Most of the source code is written in C++, but some parts are written in C. The code requires that your compiler supports C99 and C++17.
To compile Praat's Windows edition on a 64-bit Windows computer,
install Cygwin on that computer,
and under Cygwin install the Devel packages mingw64-x86_64-gcc-g++ (for 64-bit targets)
and/or mingw64-i686-gcc-g++ (for 32-bit targets).
Move the Praat sources directory somewhere in your /home/yourname
tree,
e.g. as /home/yourname/praats
and/or /home/yourname/praats32
;
the folders fon
and sys
should be visible within these folders.
If you want to build Praat's 64-bit edition, type
cd ~/praats
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.mingw64 ./makefile.defs
or if you want to build Praat's 32-bit edition, type
cd ~/praats32
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.mingw32 ./makefile.defs
Then type make
to build Praat.exe
(use make -j12
to speed this up, i.e. to use 12 processors in parallel).
Extract the praatXXXX_xcodeproj.zip file from the latest release
into the directory that contains sys
, fon
, dwtools
and so on.
Then open the project praat.xcodeproj
in Xcode 13.4 and choose Build or Run for the target praat_mac
.
You can compile with the 12.0 (i.e. the newest and standard) SDK, which will work as far back as macOS 10.9,
which is our deployment target.
If you get an error message like “Code Signing Identity xxx does not match any valid, non-expired,
code-signing certificate in your keychain”, then select the target praat_mac
, go to Info → Build,
and switch “Code Signing Identity” to “Don’t Code Sign”,
or sign with your own certificate if you have one as a registered Apple developer.
If you get lots of errors saying “Expected unqualified-id” or “Unknown type name NSString”, then you may have to switch the Type of some .cpp file from “C++ Source” to “Objective-C++ Source” (under “Identity and Type” in the righthand sidebar).
If you want to build Praat as a library instead of as an executable,
try the target praat_mac_a
(static) or praat_mac_so
(dynamic).
Notarization. If you want others to be able to use your Mac app,
you will probably have to not only sign the executable, but also notarize it. To this end,
do Xcode (version 13) -> Product -> Archive -> Distribute App -> Developer ID -> Upload ->
Automatically manage signing -> Upload -> ...wait... (“Package Approved”) ...wait...
(“Ready to distribute”) -> Export Notarized App). If your Praat.app was built into
~/builds/mac_products/Configuration64
, then you can save the notarized
Praat.app
in ~/builds/mac_products
, then drag it in the Finder to
~/builds/mac_products/Configuration64
, overwriting the non-notarized
Praat.app that was already there. If on the way you receive an error
“App Store Connect Operation Error -- You must first sign the relevant contracts online”,
you have to log in to developer.apple.com
and do Review Agreement -> Agree;
you may then also have to go to App Store Connect, log in, then Agreements, Tax, and Banking
-> View and Agree to Terms (even if you have no paid apps).
To set up the required system libraries, install some graphics and sound packages:
sudo apt-get install libgtk-3-dev
sudo apt-get install libasound2-dev
sudo apt-get install libpulse-dev
sudo apt-get install libjack-dev
To set up your source tree for Linux, go to Praat's sources directory (where the folders fon
and sys
are)
and type one of the four following commands:
# on Ubuntu command line
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.linux.pulse ./makefile.defs
# on Chromebook command line
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.chrome64 ./makefile.defs
# on Raspberry Pi command line
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.linux.rpi ./makefile.defs
# On FreeBSD command line
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.freebsd.alsa ./makefile.defs
To build the Praat executable, type make
or make -j12
.
If your Unix isn’t Linux, you may have to edit the library names in the makefile
(you may need pthread, gtk-3, gdk-3, atk-1.0, pangoft2-1.0, gdk_pixbuf-2.0, m, pangocairo-1.0,
cairo-gobject, cairo, gio-2.0, pango-1.0, freetype, fontconfig, gobject-2.0, gmodule-2.0,
gthread-2.0, rt, glib-2.0, asound, jack).
When compiling Praat on an external supercomputer or so, you will not have sound.
If you do have libgtk-3-dev
(and its dependencies), do
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.linux.silent ./makefile.defs
Then type make
or make -j12
to build the program. If your Unix isn’t Linux,
you may have to edit the library names in the makefile (you may need pthread, gtk-3, gdk-3, atk-1.0,
pangoft2-1.0, gdk_pixbuf-2.0, m, pangocairo-1.0, cairo-gobject, cairo, gio-2.0, pango-1.0,
freetype, fontconfig, gobject-2.0, gmodule-2.0, gthread-2.0, rt, glib-2.0).
When compiling Praat for use as a server for commands from your web pages, you may not need sound or a GUI. Do
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.linux.nogui ./makefile.defs
which creates the executable praat_nogui
. If you don't need graphics (e.g. PNG files) either
(i.e. you need only Praat's computation), you can create an even lighter edition:
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.linux.barren ./makefile.defs
which creates the executable praat_barren
. Then type make
or make -j12
to build the program.
If your Unix isn’t Linux, you may have to edit the library names in the makefile.
The easiest way to develop your Praat clone on all platforms simultaneously,
is to edit the source code on a Mac (with Xcode)
and use Parallels Desktop for Windows and Linux building and testing.
This is how Praat is currently developed.
Editing takes place in Xcode,
after which building Praat involves no more than typing Command-B into Xcode
(or Command-R to build and run)
or praat-build
into a Windows or Linux terminal (or praat-run
to build and run).
Your source code folders, such as fon
and sys
, will reside in a folder like /Users/yourname/Praats/src
,
where you also put praat.xcodeproj
, as described above in 3.2.
On Paul’s 2018 MacBook Pro with Xcode 13.4, building Praat with Command-B or Command-R,
after cleaning the build folder with Shift-Command-K,
takes 380 seconds for the x86_64 part and ARM64 part together (optimization level O3).
Under Parallels Desktop 17.1 or later, install Windows 10 or Windows 11. In Windows, install Cygwin,
and create a praats
folder, as described above in 3.1.
There are two options for your source tree: either it resides on the MacOS disk (which you will mount from Windows anyway), or it resides on the Windows disk. Compiling Praat for Windows on the MacOS disk takes 13 minutes (optimization level O3), whereas compiling Praat on the Windows disk takes only 4 minutes and 20 seconds. So we go with installing the source tree under the Cygwin home folder, as follows.
You need to get the source from the MacOS disk, so you have to mount the MacOS disk
from Cygwin. This is easy: in Parallels Desktop, choose Windows 10 or 11
-> Configure
,
then Options
, then Sharing
, then Share Mac
, and set Share folders
to Home folder only
(if this scares you, then use Custom Folders
instead).
Your MacOS home folder (i.e. /Users/yourname
) is now visible anywhere on Windows
as the Z
drive (or so), and from the Cygwin64 Terminal
you can access it as /cygdrive/z
.
When developing Praat for Windows, you just edit your files in Xcode;
do not forget to save them (as you do e.g. by building in Xcode).
Then, just as you use Command-B and Command-R in Xcode,
you will be able to type praat-build
(which only builds) or praat-run
(which builds and runs)
into your Cygwin64 Terminal
. To accomplish this,
add the following definitions into /home/yourname/.profile
in your Cygwin home folder,
so that the bash
shell will automatically execute them whenever you start your Cygwin64 Terminal
(you will need to have installed rsync
and make
):
# in Cygwin:~/.profile
PRAAT_SOURCES="/cygdrive/z/Praats/src"
PRAAT_EXCLUDES='--exclude="*.xcodeproj" --exclude="Icon*" --exclude=".*" --exclude="*kanweg*"'
alias praat-build="( cd ~/praats &&\
rsync -rptvz $PRAAT_SOURCES/ $PRAAT_EXCLUDES . &&\
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.mingw64 makefile.defs &&\
make -j12 )"
alias praat="~/praats/Praat.exe"
alias praat-run="praat-build && praat"
This also defines praat
for running Praat without first rebuilding it.
The cycle from editing Praat on the Mac to running the new version on Windows therefore takes only two steps:
- edit and save the source code in Xcode on your Mac;
- type
praat-run
on your Windows 10 (under Parallels Desktop on your Mac).
If you also want to develop the 32-bit edition, you add to .profile
:
# in Cygwin:~/.profile
alias praat32-build="( cd ~/praats32 &&\
rsync -rptvz $PRAAT_SOURCES/ $PRAAT_EXCLUDES . &&\
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.mingw32 makefile.defs &&\
make -j12 )"
alias praat32="~/praats32/Praat.exe"
alias praat32-run="praat32-build && praat32"
Under Parallels Desktop 17 or later, install Ubuntu 18.04 or 20.04 or 22.04, and create
a folder praats
in your home folder, as described above in 3.3.
In Parallels Desktop, choose Ubuntu 18.04 or 20.04 or 22.04
-> Configure
,
then Options
, then Sharing
, then Share Mac
, and set Share folders
to Home folder only
(or use Custom Folders
instead).
Your MacOS home folder (i.e. /Users/yourname
) is now visible on the Ubuntu desktop
as Home
, and from the Terminal
you can access it as /media/psf/Home
.
When developing Praat for Linux, you just edit and save your files in Xcode.
You will be able to type praat-build
(which only builds) or praat-run
(which builds and runs)
into your Terminal
after you add the following definitions into
/home/parallels/.bash_aliases
in your Ubuntu home folder
(this will be run automatically by .bashrc
whenever you start a Terminal
window,
assuming that it uses the bash
shell):
# in Ubuntu:~/.bash_aliases
PRAAT_SOURCES="/media/psf/Home/Praats/src"
PRAAT_EXCLUDES='--exclude="*.xcodeproj" --exclude="Icon*" --exclude=".*" --exclude="*kanweg*"'
alias praat-build="( cd ~/praats &&\
rsync -rptvz $PRAAT_SOURCES/ $PRAAT_EXCLUDES . &&\
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.linux.pulse makefile.defs &&\
make -j12 )"
alias praat="~/praats/praat"
alias praat-run="praat-build && praat"
Building Praat this way takes 2 minutes and 10 seconds (optimization level O3).
To build praat_barren
, create a folder praatsb
, and define
# in Ubuntu:~/.bash_aliases
alias praatb-build="( cd ~/praatsb &&\
rsync -rptvz $PRAAT_SOURCES/ $PRAAT_EXCLUDES . &&\
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.linux.barren makefile.defs &&\
make -j12 )"
alias praatb="~/praatsb/praat_barren"
alias praatb-run="praatb-build && praatb"
You test praat_barren
briefly by typing
# on Ubuntu command line
praatb --version
To build praat_nogui
, create a folder praatsn
, and define
# in Ubuntu:~/.bash_aliases
alias praatn-build="( cd ~/praatsn &&\
rsync -rptvz $PRAAT_SOURCES/ $PRAAT_EXCLUDES . &&\
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.linux.nogui makefile.defs &&\
make -j12 )"
alias praatn="~/praatsn/praat_nogui"
alias praatn-run="praatn-build && praatn"
You test praat_nogui
briefly by typing
# on Ubuntu command line
praatn --version
To build Praat for Chrome64 (64-bit Intel Chromebooks only),
create a folder praatc
, and define
# in Ubuntu:~/.bash_aliases
alias praatc-build="( cd ~/praatsc &&\
rsync -rptvz $PRAAT_SOURCES/ $PRAAT_EXCLUDES . &&\
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.chrome64 makefile.defs &&\
make -j12 )"
alias praatc="~/praatsc/praat"
alias praatc-run="praatc-build && praat"
To test Praat for Chrome64, you can just run it on Ubuntu by typing praatc
,
or you transfer it to a Chromebook for the real test.
Parallels Desktop 17 has no emulator for Chrome, so the choice is between building Praat on a Chromebook directly or building Praat on Ubuntu 18.04 or 20.04 or 22.04. On a 2019 HP Chromebook with Intel processor, building Praat takes a forbidding 27 minutes.
So we choose to build Praat on Ubuntu (under Parallels Desktop on the Mac),
because building the Intel Chrome64 edition on Ubuntu 18.04 takes only
2 minutes and 10 seconds. If you have the Linux set-up described in 4.3,
you can do this with the bc
command.
Next, you need a way to get the executable praat
from Mac/Ubuntu to your Chromebook.
The distributors of Praat do this via an intermediary university computer;
let’s call this computer-in-the-middle fon.hum.uva.nl
(not coincidentally, that’s the name of the computer that hosts praat.org
).
If you have an account on that computer (say it’s called yourname
),
then you can access that account with ssh
, and it is best to do that without
typing your password each time. To accomplish this, type
# on Ubuntu command line
ssh-keygen
on your Ubuntu. This gives you a file ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub
on your Ubuntu,
which contains your public ssh
key. You should append the contents of this id_rsa.pub
to the file ~/.ssh/authorized_keys
on your intermediary computer. From that moment on,
your intermediary computer will accept rsync -e ssh
calls from your Ubuntu.
On the intermediary computer, create a folder ~/builds
, and a folder chrome64
inside that.
If you now define
# in Ubuntu:~/.bash_aliases
praatc-put="rsync -tpvz ~/praatsc/praat [email protected]:~/builds/chrome64"
praatc-mid="praatc-build && praatc-put"
you can build and send Praat for Chrome to the intermediary computer by just typing
# on Ubuntu command line
praatc-mid
On your Chromebook, start up Linux (see the Chromebook download page for details),
create a directory ~/praats
there, and define the following:
# in Chromebook:~/.bash_aliases
alias praat-get="( cd ~/praats &&\
rsync -tpvz [email protected]:~/builds/chrome64/praat . )"
alias praat="~/praats/praat"
alias praat-run="praat-get && praat"
From then on, you can use
# on Chromebook command line
praat-run
to fetch Praat from the intermediary computer and run it.
The cycle from editing Praat on the Mac to running it on your Chromebook therefore takes only three steps:
- edit and save the source code in Xcode on your Mac;
- type
praatc-mid
on your Ubuntu (under Parallels Desktop on your Mac); - type
praat-run
on your Chromebook.
For edits in a cpp
file (no changes in header files), this whole cycle can be performed within 15 seconds.
One could perhaps create the Raspberry Pi edition by cross-compiling on Ubuntu 18.04 or 20.04 or 22.04.
If any reader of these lines has precise instructions, we would like to know about it
(the main problem is how to install the GTK etc libraries in the Raspberry Pi toolchain,
or how to get dpkg
under Ubuntu-buster to actually find armhf
libraries).
Till then, you build on the Raspberry Pi itself. Your could do that via an intermediary computer
(analogously to what we described above for Chromebook), but you can also do it directly
if you include your Raspberry Pi in the same local network as your Mac and switch on SSH
on your Raspberry Pi (via Raspberry -> Preferences
-> Raspberry Pi Configuration
-> Interfaces
-> SSH
-> Enable
. You add your Mac’s public SSH key to your Raspberry Pi with
# on Mac command line
ssh-keygen # only if you have no SSH key yet
ssh-copy-id [email protected] # or whatever your Pi’s static IP address is
On your Raspberry Pi, you create a folder ~/praats
,
after which you can push the sources from your Mac to your Raspberry Pi with
# in Mac:~/.bash_profile
PRAAT_SOURCES="~/Praats/src"
PRAAT_EXCLUDES='--exclude="*.xcodeproj" --exclude="Icon*" --exclude=".*" --exclude="*kanweg*"'
alias praats-putpi="rsync -rptvz -e ssh $PRAAT_EXCLUDES \
$PRAAT_SOURCES/ [email protected]:~/praats"
On the Raspberry Pi, you define
# in RaspberryPi:~/.bash_aliases
alias praat-build="( cd ~/praats &&\
cp makefiles/makefile.defs.linux.rpi makefile.defs &&\
make -j4 )"
alias praat="~/praats/praat"
alias praat-run="praat-build && praat"
after which you can build and run Praat with
# on Raspberry Pi command line
praat-run
Thus, the cycle from editing Praat on the Mac to running it on your Raspberry Pi therefore takes three steps:
- edit and save the source code in Xcode on your Mac;
- type
praats-putpi
on your Mac; - type
praat-run
on your Raspberry Pi, perhaps viassh -X [email protected]
in your Mac terminal.
From clean sources this takes around 19 minutes (on a Raspberry Pi 4B), but if no header files change, then it can be done in approximately 20 seconds.
If you want to distribute your version of Praat, you can do so on GitHub and/or on a website
(at least, that’s how the main authors do it). Both of these venues require that you have
all the executables in one place. The guide below refers to the creation of packages
for all platforms for Praat version 9.9.99, although your version number will be different.
The packages will be collected in the directory ~/Praats/www
on the Mac.
If you follow the location mentioned in the .xcodeproj
file, the Mac binary will reside
in a place like ~/builds/mac_products/Configuration64
.
After notarizing the Mac binary (see above under 3.2),
you include the executable in a .dmg
disk image, with the following commands:
# on Mac command line
PRAAT_WWW=~/Praats/www
PRAAT_VERSION=9999
cd ~/builds/mac_products/Configuration64
hdiutil create -fs HFS+ -ov -srcfolder Praat.app -volname Praat_${PRAAT_VERSION} praat_${PRAAT_VERSION}.dmg
hdiutil convert -ov -format UDZO -o ${PRAAT_WWW}/praat${PRAAT_VERSION}_mac.dmg praat_${PRAAT_VERSION}.dmg
rm praat_${PRAAT_VERSION}.dmg
You also need to distribute the .xcodeproj
file, which is actually a folder, so that you have to zip it:
# on Mac command line
PRAAT_SOURCES="~/Praats/src
cd $PRAAT_SOURCES
zip -r $PRAAT_WWW/praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_xcodeproj.zip praat.xcodeproj
The Windows executables have to be sent from your Cygwin terminal to your Mac.
It is easiest to do this without a version number (so that you have to supply the number only once),
so you send them to the intermediate Mac folders ~/builds/win64
and ~/builds/win32
.
On Cygwin you can define:
# in Cygwin:~/.profile
alias praat-dist="praat-build && rsync -t ~/praats/Praat.exe /cygdrive/z/builds/win64"
alias praat32-dist="praat32-build && rsync -t ~/praats32/Praat.exe /cygdrive/z/builds/win32"
so that you can “upload” the two executables to the Mac with
# on Cygwin command line
praat-dist
praat32-dist
The four Linux executables have to be sent from your Ubuntu terminal to your Mac,
namely to the folders ~/builds/linux64
(which will contain praat
, praat_barren
and
praat_nogui
) and ~/builds/chrome64
(which will contain only praat
).
On Ubuntu you can define
# in Ubuntu:~/.bash_aliases
alias praat-dist="praat-build && rsync -t ~/praats/praat /media/psf/Home/builds/linux64"
alias praatb-dist="praatb-build && rsync -t ~/praatsb/praat_barren /media/psf/Home/builds/linux64"
alias praatn-dist="praatn-build && rsync -t ~/praatsn/praat_nogui /media/psf/Home/builds/linux64"
alias praatc-dist="praatc-build && rsync -t ~/praatsc/praat /media/psf/Home/builds/chrome64"
so that you can “upload” the five executables to the Mac with
# on Ubuntu command line
praat-dist
praatb-dist
praatn-dist
praatc-dist
You can fetch the Raspberry Pi edition directly from your Raspberry Pi:
# on Mac command line
rsync -tpvz [email protected]:~/praats/praat ~/builds/rpi_armv7
When the folders under ~/builds
, namely win64
, win32
, linux64
, chrome64
and rpi_armv7
all contain enough new executables (there should be 1, 1, 3, 1 and 1, respectively),
you can issue the following commands to create the packages and install them in ~/Praats/www
:
# on Mac command line
zip $PRAAT_WWW/praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_win64.zip ~/builds/win64/Praat.exe
zip $PRAAT_WWW/praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_win32.zip ~/builds/win32/Praat.exe
( cd ~/builds/linux64 &&\
tar cvf praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_linux64.tar praat &&\
gzip praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_linux64.tar &&\
mv praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_linux64.tar.gz $PRAAT_WWW )
( cd ~/builds/linux64 &&\
tar cvf praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_linux64barren.tar praat_barren &&\
gzip praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_linux64barren.tar &&\
mv praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_linux64barren.tar.gz $PRAAT_WWW )
( cd ~/builds/linux64 &&\
tar cvf praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_linux64nogui.tar praat_nogui &&\
gzip praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_linux64nogui.tar &&\
mv praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_linux64nogui.tar.gz $PRAAT_WWW )
( cd ~/builds/chrome64 &&\
tar cvf praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_chrome64.tar praat &&\
gzip praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_chrome64.tar &&\
mv praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_chrome64.tar.gz $PRAAT_WWW )
( cd ~/builds/rpi_armv7 &&\
tar cvf praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_rpi_armv7.tar praat &&\
gzip praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_rpi_armv7.tar &&\
mv praat$(PRAAT_VERSION)_rpi_armv7.tar.gz $PRAAT_WWW )
Finally, you can update your website and/or create a new release on GitHub.