I'm trying to implement a little function in my app. I am currently playing sounds as AVAudioPlayers and that works fine. What I would like to add is to control the sound's position (currentTime) with an UISlider: is there a simple way to do it ?
I looked at an Apple project but it was quite messy....have you got samples or suggestions ?
Thanks to everyone in advance
Shouldn't be a problem - just set the slider to continuous and set the max value to your player's duration after loading your sound file.
Edit
I just did this and it works for me...
- (IBAction)slide { player.currentTime = slider.value; } - (void)updateTime:(NSTimer *)timer { slider.value = player.currentTime; } - (IBAction)play:(id)sender { NSURL *url = [NSURL fileURLWithPath:[[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"sound.caf" ofType:nil]]; NSError *error; player = [[AVAudioPlayer alloc] initWithContentsOfURL:url error:&error]; if (!player) NSLog(@"Error: %@", error); [player prepareToPlay]; slider.maximumValue = [player duration]; slider.value = 0.0; [NSTimer scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval:1.0 target:self selector:@selector(updateTime:) userInfo:nil repeats:YES]; [player play]; }
The slider is configured in IB, as is a button to start playing.
var player: AVAudioPlayer! var sliderr: UISlider! @IBAction func play(_ sender: Any) { var url = URL(fileURLWithPath: Bundle.main.path(forResource: "sound.caf", ofType: nil)!) var error: Error? do { player = try AVAudioPlayer(contentsOf: url) } catch let error { } if player == nil { print("Error: \(error)") } player.prepareToPlay() sliderr.maximumValue = Float(player.duration) sliderr.value = 0.0 Timer.scheduledTimer(timeInterval: 1.0, target: self, selector: #selector(self.updateTime), userInfo: nil, repeats: true) player.play() } func updateTime(_ timer: Timer) { sliderr.value = Float(player.currentTime) } @IBAction func slide(_ slider: UISlider) { player.currentTime = TimeInterval(slider.value) }
To extend on paull's answer, you'd set the slider to be continuous with a maximum value of your audio player's duration
, then add some object of yours (probably the view controller) as a target for the slider's UIControlEventValueChanged
event; when you receive the action message, you'd then set the AVAudioPlayer
's currentTime
property to the slider's value. You might also want to use an NSTimer
to update the slider's value as the audio player plays; +scheduledTimerWithTimeInterval:target:selector:userInfo:repeats:
is the easiest way to do that.
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