I'm using the following to play an m4a file:
NSString *path = [[[NSBundle mainBundle] resourcePath] stringByAppendingPathComponent: fileName];
SystemSoundID soundID;
NSURL *filePath = [NSURL fileURLWithPath:path isDirectory:NO];
AudioServicesCreateSystemSoundID((CFURLRef)filePath, &soundID);
AudioServicesPlaySystemSound(soundID);
It works fine on the simulator but I hear nothing on the device. Sounds files I'm using all stay in the bundle. Here is what filePath looks like from the device:
file://localhost/var/mobile/Applications/418945F3-3711-4B4D-BC65-0D78993C77FB/African%20Adventure.app/Switch%201.m4a
Is there an issue with the file path or any thing different I need to do for the device?
Just as a sidenote - I was having the exact same problem and spent probably close to an hour on converting files to the correct format, etc.. Yet the problem was the "mute" switch on the iPad. So even though the volume was up, and I could hear other sounds on the iPad, because the mute switch was turned on, it wasn't playing system sounds.
To add to the confusion, this app uses text-to-speech and the volume coming from the dictation was perfectly fine, it was only the sounds coming from AudioServicesPlaySystemSound() that weren't being played.
I had trouble with this too. Finally I realised it was because AudioServices can only play audio with the following constratints.
Sound files that you play using this
function must be:
- No longer than 30 seconds in duration
- In linear PCM or IMA4 (IMA/ADPCM) format
- Packaged in a .caf, .aif, or .wav file
From Apple docs: http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/AudioToolbox/Reference/SystemSoundServicesReference/Reference/reference.html
You might want to use the AVAudioPlayer instead of AudioServices.
The following code will take an audio file (.m4a) and play the audio file 1 time. Don't forget to release "audioPlayer" when you're done with it.
NSString *urlAddress = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:#"filename" ofType:#"m4a"];
NSURL *url = [NSURL fileURLWithPath:urlAddress];
NSError *error;
AVAudioPlayer *audioPlayer = [[AVAudioPlayer alloc] initWithContentsOfURL:url error:&error];
audioPlayer.numberOfLoops = 0;
if (audioPlayer == nil)
{
NSLog([error description]);
}
else
{
[audioPlayer play];
}
Hope this example helps you with playing audio on the actual device. It might also be a good idea to increase the device audio when the file is playing.
Note: You will need to add the AVFoundation framework to your project if you have not already done so. As well as import the header file.
#import <AVFoundation/AVFoundation.h>
Update:
From Apple's Core Audio Overview Document
Audio Session Services
Audio Session Services lets you manage audio sessions in your application—coordinating the audio behavior in your application with background applications on an iPhone or iPod touch. Audio Session Services consists of a subset of the functions, data types, and constants declared in the AudioServices.h header file in AudioToolbox.framework.
The AVAudioPlayer Class
The AVAudioPlayer class provides a simple Objective-C interface for playing sounds. If your application does not require stereo positioning or precise synchronization, and if you are not playing audio captured from a network stream, Apple recommends that you use this class for playback. This class is declared in the AVAudioPlayer.h header file in AVFoundation.framework.
Start by error-checking your returns. Is filePath nil? Do either of the AudioServices functions return an error? The most likely cause is case-sensitivity. The iPhone filesystem is case sensitive while the Mac is not. But the first step in debugging is to look at the errors the system is providing.
The simulator uses regular QuickTime for playback, so it's easy to have media assets which work in the sim, but fail on the device due to missing / unsupported codecs. The test is if you can play the file at all on the device, eg through Safari or the iPod app.
Related
I have tried several options (many of them referenced from this post on SO and elsewhere) to get music to play on the iPhone simulator, but so far none of it has worked. I have tried -
Unchecking, and then checking the box that says "Player user interface sound effects" in the Preferences > Sound option
Going to Audio Midi Set Up, and changing the sample rate to 44100
Ensuring that the output/input is both using the internal speakers
Make sure that I imported <AVFoundation/AVFoundation.h> and added the AVFoundation.framework to my linked frameworks.
Resetting iOS simulator using Reset Settings/Contents
Restarting XCode, as well as as the computer
I have the following code in viewDidLoad that is play the file gundam.mp3
NSString *soundFilePath = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:#"gundam" ofType:#"mp3"];
NSURL *soundFileURL = [NSURL fileURLWithPath:soundFilePath];
AVAudioPlayer *player = [[AVAudioPlayer alloc] initWithContentsOfURL:soundFileURL error:nil];
player.numberOfLoops = 1;
player.volume = 0.9;
NSLog(#"The sound URL is %#", soundFileURL);
[player play];
The NSLog seems to be able to capture the file correctly: The sound URL is file://localhost/Users/zallanx/Library/Application%20Support/iPhone%20Simulator/6.1/Applications/[...]/Missile%20Defender.app/gundam.mp3
I am unsure what I am doing incorrectly based on all the options I have tried, and would appreciate your help. Thanks!
Im using the AVFoundation framework to play sound files. The problem im having is that its stopping music from playing when the audio file gets used, im not saying play both files continuously, but play the sound file, then pick up the ipod music right where it left off. Is there any way i can use AVFoundation is this kind of way? or is there a better framework for it?
Here is what my code looks like:
click = [NSURL fileURLWithPath:[NSString stringWithFormat:#"#/Click.WAV", [[NSBundle mainBundle] resourcePath]]];
audioPlayer = [[AVAudioPlayer alloc]initWithContentsOfURL:click error:nil];
audioPlayer.numberOfLoops = 1;
[click release];
[audioPlayer play];
This code works completely fine, i had to type it out so ignore any problems that there might be with it.
Thanks,
Jacob
You can use the AVAudioSession class to change the audio "category" of your app: thus you can allow it to play on top of the iPod music. Use the -setCategory:error: method, and you will probably want to use AVAudioSessionCategoryAmbient. More info can be found in the Audio Session Programming Guide.
I've added a sound to my app.
In my .h i've added:
CFURLRef soundFileURL;
SystemSoundID soundFile;
in my viewDidLoad in my .m:
soundFileURL = CFBundleCopyResourceURL(
CFBundleGetMainBundle(),
CFSTR("sound"),
CFSTR("mp3"),
NULL);
AudioServicesCreateSystemSoundID(
soundFileURL,
&soundFile);
and lastly i've added a -playSound method:
-(void)playSound {
NSLog(#"playSound");
AudioServicesPlayAlertSound(soundFile); }
It works fine on the iPhone Simulator, but when I build the app on my iPhone the console says the sound was played but it wasn't.
I read that many others had this problem too but I didn't find any solutions.
What's wrong?
It could be your encoding - the audio codecs on the simulator are much different than those provided by your actual iPhone hardware. Try reencoding.
Also - you don't want to use an mp3 for a sound, you want to use a non-compressed file format (I suggest aiff from experience) because there isn't dedicated decoding hardware to support the sound decoding you're trying to do. (There is for playing music, which mp3 is recommended for)
I would recommend AVAudioPlayer in the AVFoundation framework. It has a simple asynchronous interface for sound playback on iOS.
Check out the Apple programming guide here.
I had a similar issue. It turned out I was referencing "Horn.caf" with
NSURL *hornSound = [[NSBundle mainBundle] URLForResource: #"horn"
withExtension: #"caf"];
Note the difference in case; My OS X Lion install is on a case insensitive file system.
Changing the code to the following fixed the issue.
NSURL *hornSound = [[NSBundle mainBundle] URLForResource: #"Horn"
withExtension: #"caf"];
Hope that helps others.
Have already tried that out and failed
I put a .wav file into my app and it was fine. So I tried to put a .wav song file into the app. When runs, there's no sound coming out. ( the song is converted from .mp3 using iTunes)
Any ideas how can I fix this? Thanks in advance
one possible reason the sound file is too large. You have different kinds of audio player in iOS some of them can only play files that are really short (something like 1-3 sec). To fix that you have to choose another player like CoreAudio.
The second possible failure is the simulator. The simulator is not always doing the same, the device do. Try running on real device and check if it's working.
// EDIT: sample code:
NSString *soundFilePath = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:#"mySound" ofType:#"mp3"];
NSURL *soundFileURL = [NSURL URLForString:soundFilePath];
AVAudioPlayer *player = [[AVAudioPlayer alloc]initWithContentsOfURL:soundFileURL];
[player play];
[player pause];
I want to be able to play a sound clip in an iPhone OS app. I've seen info on both NSSound as well as AVFoundation as being means for getting sound clips played on an iPhone OS device, but I'm still not clear on the subject and could use some help. No need to spell it out for me step-by-step in actual code, but if someone could give me a hint as to the general direction (i.e. which classes I should be focusing on) in which I should start moving I'll fill in the blanks myself. So, what's the SIMPLEST way to play a sound clip in an iPhone app?
Apple has an article on this subject, see: this link
AVAudioPlayer is the simplest way to play sounds of any length, looping or not, however it requires iPhone OS 2.2 or higher. A simple example:
NSString *soundFilePath =
[[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource: #"sound"
ofType: #"wav"];
NSURL *fileURL = [[NSURL alloc] initFileURLWithPath: soundFilePath];
AVAudioPlayer *newPlayer =
[[AVAudioPlayer alloc] initWithContentsOfURL: fileURL
error: nil];
[fileURL release];
[newPlayer play];
[newPlayer release];
It will play virtually any file format (aiff,wav,mp3,aac) Keep in mind that you can only play one mp3/aac file at a time.
Here's the simplest way I know of:
Convert your sound file to caf (use afconvert commandline tool) and add to your project.
caf stands for Core Audio Format (I think...)
Look for SoundEffect.h and .m in Apple's sample code. I believe both Metronome and BubbleLevel have it.
Copy to your project
Write code like below:
SoundEffect *SimpleSound = [[SoundEffect alloc] initWithContentsOfFile:[mainBundle pathForResource:#"soundfile" ofType:#"caf"]];
[SimpleSound play];
[SimpleSound release];
Study SoundEffect.m to get an idea of simple sound handling.