Mercurial > sdl-ios-xcode
view test/loopwave.c @ 911:04a403e4ccf5
Date: Mon, 3 May 2004 03:15:01 +0100
From: David Symmonds
Subject: SDL Typedef Structs
Hi, Thanks for the SDL libraries, I have been using them for about a year
now and they are really brilliant. One thing that I have just found whilst
using them through C++ (and needing forward declarations) is that when you
typedef structs you sometimes use
typedef struct Name
{
...
}Name;
e.g. SDL_Surface
and other times use
typedef struct
{
...
}Name;
e.g. SDL_Rect
The first type works fine, when I define a header file I can just put
'struct Name;' at the top and use the Name throughout. However, the second
type is harder to use in a header, and I haven't found a way yet, other than
to include 'SDL.h' in the header file (undesirable). Would there be any harm
in changing the definition of SDL_Rect and such like to the second form?
author | Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 18 Jul 2004 22:57:40 +0000 |
parents | 74212992fb08 |
children | be9c9c8f6d53 |
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line source
/* Program to load a wave file and loop playing it using SDL sound */ /* loopwaves.c is much more robust in handling WAVE files -- This is only for simple WAVEs */ #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <signal.h> #include "SDL.h" #include "SDL_audio.h" struct { SDL_AudioSpec spec; Uint8 *sound; /* Pointer to wave data */ Uint32 soundlen; /* Length of wave data */ int soundpos; /* Current play position */ } wave; void fillerup(void *unused, Uint8 *stream, int len) { Uint8 *waveptr; int waveleft; /* Set up the pointers */ waveptr = wave.sound + wave.soundpos; waveleft = wave.soundlen - wave.soundpos; /* Go! */ while ( waveleft <= len ) { SDL_MixAudio(stream, waveptr, waveleft, SDL_MIX_MAXVOLUME); stream += waveleft; len -= waveleft; waveptr = wave.sound; waveleft = wave.soundlen; wave.soundpos = 0; } SDL_MixAudio(stream, waveptr, len, SDL_MIX_MAXVOLUME); wave.soundpos += len; } static int done = 0; void poked(int sig) { done = 1; } int main(int argc, char *argv[]) { char name[32]; /* Load the SDL library */ if ( SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_AUDIO) < 0 ) { fprintf(stderr, "Couldn't initialize SDL: %s\n",SDL_GetError()); exit(1); } atexit(SDL_Quit); if ( argv[1] == NULL ) { fprintf(stderr, "Usage: %s <wavefile>\n", argv[0]); exit(1); } /* Load the wave file into memory */ if ( SDL_LoadWAV(argv[1], &wave.spec, &wave.sound, &wave.soundlen) == NULL ) { fprintf(stderr, "Couldn't load %s: %s\n", argv[1], SDL_GetError()); exit(1); } wave.spec.callback = fillerup; /* Set the signals */ #ifdef SIGHUP signal(SIGHUP, poked); #endif signal(SIGINT, poked); #ifdef SIGQUIT signal(SIGQUIT, poked); #endif signal(SIGTERM, poked); /* Initialize fillerup() variables */ if ( SDL_OpenAudio(&wave.spec, NULL) < 0 ) { fprintf(stderr, "Couldn't open audio: %s\n", SDL_GetError()); SDL_FreeWAV(wave.sound); exit(2); } SDL_PauseAudio(0); /* Let the audio run */ printf("Using audio driver: %s\n", SDL_AudioDriverName(name, 32)); while ( ! done && (SDL_GetAudioStatus() == SDL_AUDIO_PLAYING) ) SDL_Delay(1000); /* Clean up on signal */ SDL_CloseAudio(); SDL_FreeWAV(wave.sound); return(0); }