 |
|
<<O>> Difference Topic
JavaSound
(2 - 26 Oct 2005 - Main.kevglass)
|
| |
| META TOPICPARENT | name="WebHome" |
JavaSound | |
> > | (http://java.sun.com/products/java-media/sound/index.jsp) | | | Purpose
JavaSound is a "low-level" API for sound capture and playback.
At present, the API does not provide many facilities for sound manipulation (i.e. it's not a DSP library). |
|
<<O>> Difference Topic
JavaSound
(1 - 28 Sep 2004 - Main.grlea)
|
|
> > |
| META TOPICPARENT | name="WebHome" |
JavaSound
Purpose
JavaSound is a "low-level" API for sound capture and playback.
At present, the API does not provide many facilities for sound manipulation (i.e. it's not a DSP library).
The API is split into two main sections:
-
javax.sound.sampled for recording and playback of sounds as waveforms, by receiving or transmitting samples of those waveforms
-
javax.sound.midi for recording and playback of compositions represented as sequences of MIDI events.
Both sections use a Service Provider Interface (SPI), allowing the implementations to be enhanced by plugging in new implementations of pretty much everything from codecs to file formats to MIDI synthesizers.
History
This section needs work from someone who knows!!
Florian Bomers and Matthias Pfisterer started an open-source implementation of JavaSound in 1999, named the Tritonus project.
Florian worked with Sun from June 2001 until August 2004 as the JavaSound "lead" (actually a one-man superteam, as I understand it!)
JavaSound vs Java Media Framework
As said, JavaSound is intended to be a "low-level" API, in contrary to the JavaMediaFramework? (JMF).
While simply playing or recording a WAV or MIDI file with JavaSound isn't very hard, there is no provision for more complex tasks like synchronizing sound with video. This is not the point of JavaSound, however, and, being a low-level API, such functionalities can be built on top of it.
One major advantage of JavaSound is that it is a standard package, included in J2SE? since version 1.3.
JMF, on the other hand, is an optional package, which means it must be distributed with applications, or installed by the end user, in order to be available.
Links
Product homepage on java.sun.com.
The official user documentation, which is actually quite good. 15 chapters from intro to basic to expert; well-organised and reads like a tutorial.
Only for newbies, e.g. "What is JavaSound?" etc. See below for the technical FAQ.
FAQs, code examples and applications collected and published by the Tritonus guys.
FAQs: General, Audio Programming, MIDI Programming, Applets, Performance, Resources, Triotonus, Misc.
The subscription page for the Sun-run mailing list. Quite active and helpful (though read the FAQ before posting). Florian and Matthias have always provided expert guidance help through the list. Hopefully the next Sun JavaSound man/woman will also be as open and helpful.
- 1.5.0 (1.5.0 was a major update: Ports and MIDI I/O are now fully implemented on all platforms)
- 1.4.2
- 1.4.1
- 1.4.0
API Documentation
A page of links to other resources from the JavaSound Resources site.
-- GrahamLea - 28 Sep 2004 |
|