view docs/html/guidebasicsinit.html @ 773:da0a2ad35bf4

Date: Sun, 4 Jan 2004 23:48:19 +0100 From: Max Horn Subject: Re: Again Audio CD patch Am 04.01.2004 um 22:38 schrieb Sam Lantinga: > > Okay, I fixed the buffering problems by simply using a 4 second buffer > instead of a 1 second buffer. However, using your code I can't play an > entire CD - the playback stops after the first song. > Found the problem: FSReadFork returns eofErr when the file is finished. However, we check its return value for errors, and if anything but noErr occurs, the reader thread aborts its current iteration. That is bad, because it aborts before it can ever set the flag which tells that the file is over (also, any remaining data which FSRead did return is lost - so you'd not hear about to 4 seconds from the end of the file. Furthermore, the computed data size was 8 bytes to high (I forgot to account for the fact that the size of an (A)IFF chunk always contains the chunk header & size fields, too). This is enough to make it work. However, the end condition is rather fragile, so I tuned some other things to be pessimistic (check for <= 0 instead of == 0, when eofErr is encountered enforce mReadFilePosition == mFileLength). You never know... The attached patch fixes the issue for me.
author Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org>
date Mon, 05 Jan 2004 00:57:51 +0000
parents e5bc29de3f0a
children 355632dca928
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>Initializing SDL</A
></H1
><P
>SDL is composed of eight subsystems - Audio, CDROM, Event Handling, File I/O, Joystick Handling, Threading, Timers and Video. Before you can use any of these subsystems they must be initialized by calling <A
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><TT
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></A
> (or <A
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><TT
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></A
>). <TT
CLASS="FUNCTION"
>SDL_Init</TT
> must be called before any other SDL function. It automatically initializes the Event Handling, File I/O and Threading subsystems and it takes a parameter specifying which other subsystems to initialize. So, to initialize the default subsystems and the Video subsystems you would call:
<PRE
CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
>    SDL_Init ( SDL_INIT_VIDEO );</PRE
>
To initialize the default subsystems, the Video subsystem and the Timers subsystem you would call:
<PRE
CLASS="PROGRAMLISTING"
>    SDL_Init ( SDL_INIT_VIDEO | SDL_INIT_TIMER );</PRE
></P
><P
><TT
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> is complemented by <A
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></A
> (and <A
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>). <TT
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>SDL_Quit</TT
> shuts down all subsystems, including the default ones. It should always be called before a SDL application exits.</P
><P
>With <TT
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>SDL_Init</TT
> and <TT
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>SDL_Quit</TT
> firmly embedded in your programmers toolkit you can write your first and most basic SDL application. However, we must be prepare to handle errors. Many SDL functions return a value and indicates whether the function has succeeded or failed, <TT
CLASS="FUNCTION"
>SDL_Init</TT
>, for instance, returns -1 if it could not initialize a subsystem. SDL provides a useful facility that allows you to determine exactly what the problem was, every time an error occurs within SDL an error message is stored which can be retrieved using <TT
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>SDL_GetError</TT
>. Use this often, you can never know too much about an error.</P
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><B
>Example 1-1. Initializing SDL</B
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><PRE
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>#include "SDL.h"   /* All SDL App's need this */
#include &#60;stdio.h&#62;

int main() {
    
    printf("Initializing SDL.\n");
    
    /* Initialize defaults, Video and Audio */
    if((SDL_Init(SDL_INIT_VIDEO|SDL_INIT_AUDIO)==-1)) { 
        printf("Could not initialize SDL: %s.\n", SDL_GetError());
        exit(-1);
    }

    printf("SDL initialized.\n");

    printf("Quiting SDL.\n");
    
    /* Shutdown all subsystems */
    SDL_Quit();
    
    printf("Quiting....\n");

    exit(0);
}&#13;</PRE
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