As Richard said:
> LC's Player control uses the host OS's playback engine, so as long as
> the OS-supplied media player can handle a format, LC should be able to
> as well.
For clarity, I would add that the mp3 files to be played could be included
with a standalone package on platforms like macOS
ose one could store the binary data of MP3s or other media within a
stack’s properties, then extract them to disk for use by a player object.
Jim Lambert
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Sent: Monday, April 13, 2020 11:46 AM
To: How to use LiveCode
Cc: Colin Holgate
Subject: Re: MP3s
I don’t know where it is now, probably lost, but I had a JVC quadraphonic 8
Track player. It could play regular 8 Track, which involved playing two tracks
on the first loop and the other two trac
I don’t know where it is now, probably lost, but I had a JVC quadraphonic 8
Track player. It could play regular 8 Track, which involved playing two tracks
on the first loop and the other two tracks on the second loop, or it could play
the four tracks in one loop. I only had a few tapes for it, o
Graham Samuel wrote:
> Well, Richard, as usual you say something informative and useful!
>
> I didn’t know that LC could play a sound file in MP3 format.
LC's Player control uses the host OS's playback engine, so as long as
the OS-supplied media player can handle a format, LC should be able to
them in the wrong place and then
>> complain they want their money back because your application doesn't work.
>>
>> This may be "old-fashioned", but so am I teaching kids how to program with
>> BBC computers from the 1980s;
>> doesn't mean
teaching kids how to program with
> BBC computers from the 1980s;
> doesn't mean it is a bad thing.
>
> And on Linux . . . what a shambles.
>
> Re MP3s /per se/: either LiveCode should be capable of embedding them, or,
> possibly by leveraging open source
> code, it
Well, Richard, as usual you say something informative and useful!
I didn’t know that LC could play a sound file in MP3 format. I am in the odd
position of being a veteran of LC (and to some extent even Hypercard and
Supercard) and I have developed published apps; but despite my regular reading
nux . . . what a shambles.
Re MP3s /per se/: either LiveCode should be capable of embedding them,
or, possibly by leveraging open source
code, it should be able to read MP3 files and store the musical data
contained within them inwith stacks in some
format that can then be played . . .
The comp
Graham Samuel wrote:
> Still, subject closed - I presume the mother ship has long ago decided
> not to enhance LC in this respect any time soon.
Not at all. I noticed this thread got off on the tangent of codec
specifics, but never addressed your core question:
LiveCode can play all of those
Lossy? Yes, like JPEG. And like JPEG, the format does very well indeed for a
huge variety of applications. I listen to MP3 music a lot, mostly classical,
and I don’t feel the lossy aspect is really taking away from the quality of
what I hear to any extent. Of course if the whole chain of product
For AIFF and WAV the file size is affected by the sample rate, number of bits,
and number of channels. For MP3, only the data rate determines the file size.
> On Apr 12, 2020, at 12:32 PM, Mark Wieder via use-livecode
> wrote:
>
> On 4/12/20 11:07 AM, Richmond via use-livecode wrote:
>
>> "J
On 4/12/20 11:07 AM, Richmond via use-livecode wrote:
"Just for fun" I exported a sound file as WAV, AIFF and MP3 using Audacity"
WAV 36.9 MB
AIFF 36.9 MB
MP3 4.4 MB
which means that WAV and AIFF stink about 9 times more than MP3
For the record, mp3 is a lossy format while WAV and AIFF a
You are not ignorant . . .
And the sound import stuff in LiveCode is donkey's years out of date.
"Just for fun" I exported a sound file as WAV, AIFF and MP3 using Audacity"
WAV 36.9 MB
AIFF 36.9 MB
MP3 4.4 MB
which means that WAV and AIFF stink about 9 times more than MP3
NWO: as Audacity
AIFF
On 12.04.20 20:09, Graham Samuel via use-livecode wrote:
Pardon my ignorance, but Is there really no way to put an mp3 sound into a
stack as an audioclip and play it? Seems unlikely, but that’s what the
dictionary says. WAV, forsooth!
Graham
__
Pardon my ignorance, but Is there really no way to put an mp3 sound into a
stack as an audioclip and play it? Seems unlikely, but that’s what the
dictionary says. WAV, forsooth!
Graham
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