mpintro= new MediaPlayer();
for(int i=2;i<results.size();i++){
if(results.get(i).equals(emotion[position])){
try {
mpintro.setDataSource(retmus.get(i));
mpintro.start();
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
I want to play a complete list of songs using mediaplayer class which can be indexed through for loop.It doesnt show any error.but it doesnt play also.
I am writing an app that records voice from the microphone in AMR format using MediaRecorder, and then plays the data back using MediaPlayer.
That's the goal anyway.
I am fairly confident my MediaRecorder side is working, I'm producing the data file in the right place at the right data rate. Here's how I start and stop my MediaRecorder
public void OnStartRecord(View v )
{
System.out.println( "StartRecord");
try {
audioFile = File.createTempFile("amrtmp", ".amr", getApplicationContext().getFilesDir());
} catch (IOException e) {
// TODO Auto-generated catch block
e.printStackTrace();
}
System.out.println( "Recording to " + audioFile.getAbsolutePath());
mRecorder = new MediaRecorder();
mRecorder.setAudioSource(MediaRecorder.AudioSource.VOICE_COMMUNICATION);
mRecorder.setOutputFormat(MediaRecorder.OutputFormat.AMR_NB);
mRecorder.setAudioEncoder(MediaRecorder.AudioEncoder.AMR_NB);
mRecorder.setAudioEncodingBitRate(4750);
mRecorder.setAudioSamplingRate(8000);
mRecorder.setOutputFile(audioFile.getAbsolutePath());
try {
mRecorder.prepare();
} catch (IllegalStateException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
mRecorder.start();
}
public void OnStopRecord(View v )
{
System.out.println( "StopRecord");
mRecorder.stop();
mRecorder.release();
}
This works like a charm. Typical output is something like
StartRecord
Recording to /data/data/com.test.playback/files/amrtmp-235967797.amr
And when I start, then stop recording I can see that the file has been created and it has a certain amount of data in it that properly corresponds to the settings.
Side note: I detect an odd buzzing at my speaker while this runs. Any idea what that is?
When I try to play the file back however I have no end of trouble. I have tried the following:
public void OnPlay(View v )
{
MediaPlayer mPlayer = new MediaPlayer();
mPlayer.setAudioStreamType(AudioManager.STREAM_VOICE_CALL);
FileInputStream FIS = null;
try {
FIS = new FileInputStream(audioFile.getAbsolutePath());
mPlayer.setDataSource(FIS.getFD());
mPlayer.prepare();
}
catch( Exception e )
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
mPlayer.start();
}
This results in nothing being played at all with the following output from MediaPlayer:
start() mURI is null
I have also tried the same code, but setting mPlayer's data source differently:
mPlayer.setDataSource(audioFile.getAbsolutePath());
This fails when prepare is called witha java.io.IOException status 0x1.
I have to imagine there is something else I need to do with MediaPlayer to set it up properly. Any suggestions?
Why doesn't the MediaPlayer show the video as soon as it is available. What I mean is on the IPhone when a video is played the video shows up right away. Even when returning from pause. But on the Android the screen stays black for a couple of milliseconds to a second depending on the device used and how many processes are running in the background.
I'm asking this because i want to use one of the beginning frames from my video play as a type of screenshot and currently I'm using a handler to wait 1 second before pausing the video.
Can someone tell me a quick way to make the video show up as soon as it is started or even prepared instead of my workaround?
EDIT:
Here is how I prepare my video player so It should be prepared right.
private void initVideo()
{
Log.i("VideoPlayer", "Initialize Video File" + videoFileName);
AssetFileDescriptor afd;
try {
if(videoFileName != null);
{
afd = getAssets().openFd(videoFileName);
vidplayer = new MediaPlayer();
vidplayer.setDataSource(afd.getFileDescriptor(), afd.getStartOffset(), afd.getDeclaredLength());
vidplayer.setDisplay(holder);
vidplayer.prepare();
vidplayer.setOnCompletionListener(this);
vidplayer.setOnPreparedListener(this);
//Log.i("INITVIDEO", Integer.toString(videoPausedAt));
vidplayer.seekTo(videoPausedAt);
//Log.i("VideoPlayer", "video Prepared");
videoDuration = vidplayer.getDuration()/1000;
isVideoReady = true;
}
} catch (IllegalArgumentException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
} catch (IllegalStateException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
} catch (Exception e)
{
//Log.i("InitPlayer", e.getClass().toString());
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
For the background, you can get a thumbnail of the video:
private Bitmap getThumbnail(String path){
try{
return ThumbnailUtils.createVideoThumbnail(path, MediaStore.Images.Thumbnails.MINI_KIND);
}catch(Exception e){
return null;
}
}
When the video starts, you'll need to set the background back to null or you won't be able to see the video.
As for it not playing right away, it should play as soon as start() is called if you prepared it correctly, but it could be delayed if it has to load data let's say from a stream over the internet.
I have found that it is the phones fault.(mostly) Video's will show up automatically unless phone is bogged down with apps and thus loading of the video takes longer (noticed after having a voip service running).
My media player is in a service object of it's own. Here's the create code.
public void onCreate() {
Toast.makeText(this, "My Service Created", Toast.LENGTH_LONG).show();
Log.d(TAG, "onCreate");
player = new MediaPlayer();
try {
player.setDataSource(path);
player.prepare();
} catch (Exception e) {
}
player.setLooping(false); // Set looping
}
It is streaming from online. However, it's pretty choppy 3 minutes later. I want to double buffer this to help remove that. Any ideas on how I should do this?
Have you looked at the android Double Buffer class?
I'm new to Android development and I have a question/problem.
I'm playing around with the MediaPlayer class to reproduce some sounds/music. I am playing raw resources (res/raw) and it looks kind of easy.
To play a raw resource, the MediaPlayer has to be initialized like this:
MediaPlayer mp = MediaPlayer.create(appContext, R.raw.song);
mp.start();
Until here there is no problem. The sound is played, and everything works fine. My problem appears when I want to add more options to my application. Specifically when I add the "Stop" button/option.
Basically, what I want to do is...when I press "Stop", the music stops. And when I press "Start", the song/sound starts over. (pretty basic!)
To stop the media player, you only have to call stop(). But to play the sound again, the media player has to be reseted and prepared.
mp.reset();
mp.setDataSource(params);
mp.prepare();
The problem is that the method setDataSource() only accepts as params a file path, Content Provider URI, streaming media URL path, or File Descriptor.
So, since this method doesn't accept a resource identifier, I don't know how to set the data source in order to call prepare(). In addition, I don't understand why you can't use a Resouce identifier to set the data source, but you can use a resource identifier when initializing the MediaPlayer.
I guess I'm missing something. I wonder if I am mixing concepts, and the method stop() doesn't have to be called in the "Stop" button. Any help?
Thanks in advance!!!
Here is what I did to load multiple resources with a single MediaPlayer:
/**
* Play a sample with the Android MediaPLayer.
*
* #param resid Resource ID if the sample to play.
*/
private void playSample(int resid)
{
AssetFileDescriptor afd = context.getResources().openRawResourceFd(resid);
try
{
mediaPlayer.reset();
mediaPlayer.setDataSource(afd.getFileDescriptor(), afd.getStartOffset(), afd.getDeclaredLength());
mediaPlayer.prepare();
mediaPlayer.start();
afd.close();
}
catch (IllegalArgumentException e)
{
Log.e(TAG, "Unable to play audio queue do to exception: " + e.getMessage(), e);
}
catch (IllegalStateException e)
{
Log.e(TAG, "Unable to play audio queue do to exception: " + e.getMessage(), e);
}
catch (IOException e)
{
Log.e(TAG, "Unable to play audio queue do to exception: " + e.getMessage(), e);
}
mediaPlay is a member variable that get created and released at other points in the class. This may not be the best way (I am new to Android myself), but it seems to work. Just note that the code will probably fall trough to the bottom of the method before the mediaPlayer is done playing. If you need to play a series of resources, you will still need to handle this case.
this is how MediaPlayer.create method works to open a raw file:
public static MediaPlayer create(Context context, int resid) {
try {
AssetFileDescriptor afd = context.getResources().openRawResourceFd(resid);
if (afd == null) return null;
MediaPlayer mp = new MediaPlayer();
mp.setDataSource(afd.getFileDescriptor(), afd.getStartOffset(), afd.getLength());
afd.close();
mp.prepare();
return mp;
} catch (IOException ex) {
Log.d(TAG, "create failed:", ex);
// fall through
} catch (IllegalArgumentException ex) {
Log.d(TAG, "create failed:", ex);
// fall through
} catch (SecurityException ex) {
Log.d(TAG, "create failed:", ex);
// fall through
}
return null;
}
Or, you could access the resource in this way:
mediaPlayer.setDataSource(context, Uri.parse("android.resource://com.package.name/raw/song"));
where com.package.name is the name of your application package
You can use
mp.pause();
mp.seekTo(0);
to stop music player.
Finally, the way it works for me:
public class MainStart extends Activity {
ImageButton buttonImage;
MediaPlayer mp;
Boolean playing = false;
#Override
public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.main);
buttonImage = (ImageButton)findViewById(R.id.ButtonID);
buttonImage.setOnClickListener(new OnClickListener() {
#Override
public void onClick(View v) {
if(playing){
mp.stop();
playing = false;
}else{
mp = MediaPlayer.create(getApplicationContext(), R.raw.sound_u_want);
mp.start();
playing = true;
}
}
});
}
}
MR. Rectangle, this message maybe too late for it, but I proudly write these codes to your idea: I have mp for mediaplayer and sescal9 is a button.
....
if(btnClicked.getId() == sescal9_ornek_muzik.getId())
{
mp.start();
mp.seekTo(380);
mp2.start();
mp2.seekTo(360);
mp3.start();
mp3.seekTo(340);
...
}
Recheck your passing parameters not null
Possible reasons
Context may be null
Your media file may be corrupted