Hi Glen,
If you have python going and you can install pyalsaaudio, it should work
on ARM as is.
Kind regards, Willem
On Sat, 13 Apr 2019, Glenn At Home wrote:
[The e-mail server of the sender could not be verified (SPF Record)]
Hi Willem,
Any chance you can do this for ARM as well?
Thanks.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Willem van der Walt" <wvdwalt@xxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: "Speakup is a screen review system for Linux."
<speakup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Saturday, April 13, 2019 10:35 AM
Subject: Re: : Using enter or using arrows, that is the question
Hi all,
Janina, thanks for the suggestion, but no, I am writing this in python,
alsamixer is written in C as far as I know.
It is just the way I have written the code which kind of precludes the
up/down arrow thing, and that I do not really see what is so wrong with
the current way things are done.
What I might consider doing, would be to replace the two options, one for
up and one for down, with one option, e.g.
Playback volume 30 percent
I can then make it use two other keys, e.g. pageup and pagedown or f2 and
f3 to go softer or louder.
I am not that keen on doing it, as it deviates from the way things are
selected and used throughout the rest of the program.
The up/down arrows are already used to move among the options.
Left and right arrows would be the obvious choice, but I am using speakup
and it will say space if I use them.
One can also make the keys configurable later.
One needs the percentages when e.g. trying to get a silent soundcard
going, and if I take it out there, how would you know at what levels the
controls are?
Hope this make sens.
Willem
On Sat, 13 Apr 2019, Janina Sajka wrote:
Hmmm, I hadn't considered that simply repeated presses of enter would
continue to adjust levels in realtime. That just might be good enough,
imo.
RE: How to put such behavior on the up/down keys, alsamixer is likely
the source to copy from.
Janina
Chuck Hallenbeck writes:
Hi all,
I prefer to remain witgh the use of enter to make adjustments in
controls suchaas Master, for instance, which makes a lot of sense given
that upward adjustment and downward adjustment are offered as separate
items in the menu for that control. Arrowing to the upward item and
pressing enter makes the adjustment and leaves the control selected,
so that pressing enter repeatedly makes a series of adjustments in
the same direction. It's beautiful to see the percent figure change and
hear the perceived loudness change in sync with the numeric value. I'm
not sure how one would put the entire job of making adjustment onto
the arrow keys.
Just my $0.02 worth.
Chuck
--
Here In Northeast Ohio, The Moon is Waxing Gibbous (57% of Full)
If you don't stand for something, you will fall for anything.
Sent from Lucille's missing iPhone.
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--
Janina Sajka
Linux Foundation Fellow
Executive Chair, Accessibility Workgroup: http://a11y.org
The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)
Chair, Accessible Platform Architectures http://www.w3.org/wai/apa
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