My mp3 playing code is:
NSError *error;
soundObject = [[AVAudioPlayer alloc] initWithContentsOfURL:[NSURL fileURLWithPath:audioPathString] error:&error];
if (soundObject == nil) NSLog(@"%@", [error description]);
soundObject.delegate = self;
soundObject.numberOfLoops = 0;
soundObject.volume = 1.0;
NSLog(@"about to play");
[soundObject prepareToPlay];
[soundObject play];
NSLog(@"[soundObject play];");
The mp3 used to play fine, and it still does on the simulator. But not on the device.
I've recently added some sound recording code (not mine) to the software. It uses AudioQueue stuff which is slightly beyond me. Does that conflict with AVAudioPlayer? Or what could be the problem? I've noticed that as soon as the audiorecording code starts working, I can't adjust the volume on the device anymore, so maybe it blocks the audio playback?.
EDIT
The solution seems to be to put this in my code. I put it in applicationDidFinishLaunching:
[[AVAudioSession sharedInstance] setCategory: AVAudioSessionCategoryPlayAndRecord error: nil];
UInt32 audioRouteOverride = kAudioSessionOverrideAudioRoute_Speaker;
AudioSessionSetProperty (kAudioSessionProperty_OverrideAudioRoute,sizeof (audioRouteOverride),&audioRouteOverride);
The first line allows both play and record, whilst the other lines apparently reroute things to make the volume louder.
All audio code is voodoo to me.
Make sure your iPhone's "Ringer Button" isn't showing the color red.
Some code I know works:
- (void)playOnce:(NSString *)aSound {
// Gets the file system path to the sound to play.
NSString *soundFilePath = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:aSound ofType:@"caf"];
// Converts the sound's file path to an NSURL object
NSURL *soundURL = [[NSURL alloc] initFileURLWithPath: soundFilePath];
self.soundFileURL = soundURL;
[soundURL release];
AVAudioPlayer * newAudio=[[AVAudioPlayer alloc] initWithContentsOfURL: soundFileURL error:nil];
self.theAudio = newAudio; // automatically retain audio and dealloc old file if new file is loaded
[newAudio release]; // release the audio safely
[theAudio prepareToPlay];
// set it up and play
[theAudio setNumberOfLoops:0];
[theAudio setVolume: volumeLevel];
[theAudio setDelegate: self];
[theAudio play];
}
Here's a quick, simple thing to try:
I ran into a similar issue with images as well as sounds. The iPhone is cap-sensitive, even the file extensions, but the simulator is not. Check the NSURL
object != nil in addition to soundObject.
You may also want to try [[NSBundle mainBundle] URLForResource:@"sound" ofType:@"mp3"];
and make sure the file is being copied into the .app under YourApp.app/Resources/
-Stephen
I set following line into the code.
do {
try AVAudioSession.sharedInstance().setCategory(.playAndRecord)
} catch {
print ("There is an issue with this code!")
}
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