| audiopy - a program to control the Solaris audio device. |
| |
| Contact: Barry Warsaw |
| Email: bwarsaw@python.org |
| Version: 1.1 |
| |
| Introduction |
| |
| Audiopy is a program to control the Solaris audio device, allowing |
| you to choose both the input and output devices, and to set the |
| output volume. It can be run either as a standalone command-line |
| script, or as a Tkinter based GUI application. |
| |
| Note that your version of Python must have been built with the |
| sunaudiodev module enabled. It is not enabled by default however! |
| You will need to edit your Modules/Setup file, uncomment the |
| sunaudiodev module spec line and rebuild Python. |
| |
| Using audiopy, you can select one of three possible input devices: |
| the microphone, the line-in jack, or the CD in. These choices are |
| mutually exclusive; you can only have one active input device at |
| any one time (this is enforced by the underlying device). Some |
| input devices may not be supported on all Solaris machines. |
| |
| You can also choose to enable any of the three possible output |
| devices: the headphone jack, the speakers, or the line-out jack. |
| You can enable any combination of these three devices. |
| |
| You can also set the output gain (volume) level. |
| |
| Running as a GUI |
| |
| Simply start audiopy with no arguments to start it as a Tkinter |
| based GUI application. It will pop up a window with two sections: |
| the top portion contains three radio buttons indicating your |
| selected input device; the middle portion contains three |
| checkboxes indicating your selected output devices; the bottom |
| portion contains a slider that changes the output gain. |
| |
| Note the underlined characters in the button labels. These |
| indicate keyboard accelerators so that pressing Alt+character you |
| can select that device. For example, Alt-s toggles the Speaker |
| device. The Alt accelerators are the same as those you'd use in |
| as the short-form command line switches (see below). |
| |
| Alt-q is also an accelerator for selecting Quit from the File |
| menu. |
| |
| Unsupported devices will appear dimmed out in the GUI. When run |
| as a GUI, audiopy monitors the audio device and automatically |
| updates its display if the state of the device is changed by some |
| other means. With Python versions before 1.5.2 this is done by |
| occasionally polling the device, but in Python 1.5.2 no polling is |
| necessary (you don't really need to know this, but I thought I'd |
| plug 1.5.2 :-). |
| |
| Running as a Command Line Program |
| |
| You can run audiopy from the command line to select any |
| combination of input or output device, by using the command line |
| options. Actually, any option forces audiopy to run as a command |
| line program and not display its GUI. |
| |
| Options have the general form |
| |
| --device[={0,1}] |
| -d[-{0,1}] |
| |
| meaning there is both a long-form and short-form of the switch, |
| where `device' or `d' is one of the following: |
| |
| (input) |
| microphone -- m |
| linein -- i |
| cd -- c |
| |
| (output) |
| headphones -- p |
| speaker -- s |
| lineout -- o |
| |
| When no value is given, the switch just toggles the specified |
| device. With a value, 0 turns the device off and 1 turns the |
| device on. Any other value is an error. |
| |
| For example, to turn the speakers off, turn the headphones on, and |
| toggle the cd input device, run audiopy from the command line like |
| so: |
| |
| % ./audiopy -s=0 -p=1 -c |
| |
| Audiopy understands these other command line options: |
| |
| --gain volume |
| -g volume |
| Sets the output volume to the specified gain level. This must |
| be an integer between MIN_GAIN and MAX_GAIN (usually [0..255], |
| but use the -h option to find the exact values). |
| |
| --version |
| -v |
| Print the version number and exit |
| |
| --help |
| -h |
| Print a help message and exit |
| |
| |
| |
| Local Variables: |
| indent-tabs-mode: nil |
| End: |