Asaph is a tool for Christian music groups and worship leaders for managing song databases. Its features include searching, manipulating chord markings, printing lead sheets, and generating presentations for use in group worship.
| Tags | multimedia Graphics Viewers printing Religion Presentation |
|---|---|
| Licenses | GPL |
| Operating Systems | Windows Windows Mac OS X OS Independent POSIX Linux |
| Implementation | Java |
Recent releases


Changes: This release included several minor fixes and enhancements to the GUI. The user's guide is in progress but not yet complete.


Changes: This release includes several minor fixes and enhancements to the GUI. The user's guide is in progress but not yet complete.


Changes: Several feature enhancements were made, including an "open recent" menu, user interface improvements, and improvements to error/bug reporting, in addition to bugfixes.


Changes: Several feature enhancements were made, including printing enhancements, an installer for Windows, integration of the new logo and icon, and build enhancements, along with several bugfixes.


Changes: This release fixes several important bugs, including issues with printing multi-column and multi-page songs.
- All comments
Recent commentsGreat program
Found this last week. How're you coming on the documentation?
Re: Asaph
> Program looks pretty solid. Has anyone
> entered any significant number of songs
> into a database? If so, how many songs
> are entered and how large is the file?
My current personal database has 198 songs. (I'm still adding songs from the printouts and text files I've accumulated over the years, and expect it to reach around 350 when I'm done.) I'm using an "indexed" database for it, which is stored as a directory full of files, one file per song. If I save the whole thing as a "simple" database, where all the songs are concatenated into one file, it's 480k.
Asaph
Program looks pretty solid. Has anyone entered any significant number of songs into a database? If so, how many songs are entered and how large is the file?