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1 Audacious (c) GPL 2005-2006
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2
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3 Audacious Development Team (see AUTHORS)
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4
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5
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6 Based on:
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7 BMP - Beep Media Player.
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8
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9 Which was based on:
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10 XMMS - X Multimedia System (c)1997-2001
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11
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12 A Cross platform Multimedia Player
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13
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14 Peter Alm, Thomas Nilsson, Olle Hallnas, Håvard Kvålen
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15
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16
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17 NOTE: This document is hardly maintained. Please check the Users' Guide on
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18 the Audacious website.
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19
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20
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21 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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22 *****************
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23
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24 1. Disclaimer
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25 2. Installation
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26 2.1 Basic Installation
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27 2.2 Border less Installation
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28 2.3 Skin Installation
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29 3. Documentation
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30 3.1 Controlling Audacious
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31 3.1.1 Key bindings
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32 3.2 Playlist Editor
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33 3.3 Equalizer
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34 3.4 Menu
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35 3.5 Preferences
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36 3.5.1 Audio I/O Plugins
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37 3.5.2 Effect/General Plugins
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38 3.5.3 Visualization Plugins
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39 3.5.4 Options
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40 3.5.5 Fonts
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41 3.5.6 Title
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42 3.6 Plugins
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43 3.6.1 Input plugins
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44 3.6.1.1 Cd Audio Player
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45 3.6.1.2 MPEG Layer 1/2/3 player
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46 3.6.1.3 Ogg Vorbis player
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47 3.6.1.4 WAV player
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48 3.6.2 Output plugins
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49 3.6.2.1 OSS Driver
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50 3.6.2.2 eSound Output
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51 3.6.2.3 BSD Sun Output
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52 3.6.3 Effect plugins
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53 3.6.4 General plugins
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54 3.6.5 Visualization plugins
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55 3.6.5.1 Blur scope
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56 4. Command Line Options
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57 5. Features
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58 5.1 Supported File formats
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59 5.2 Supported Features
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60 6. Obtaining Audacious
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61 7. Misc
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62 7.1 Shoutcast support
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63 7.2 Tips and tricks
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64 8. Bugs
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65 9. Contact Email
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66
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67
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68
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69
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70 1. Disclaimer
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71 -------------
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72
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73 We are not liable for any damage caused by the use of this program.
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74
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75 Audacious is NOT a port of WinAmp (http://www.winamp.com). Audacious is a fork of
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76 XMMS (http://xmms.org) and BMP (http://beep-media-player.org) which borrowed the
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77 WinAmp GUI.
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78
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79
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80 2. Installation
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81 ---------------
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82
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83 Audacious requires the following libraries and their development
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84 packages installed:
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85
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86 Glib 2.4
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87 (http://www.gtk.org/download/)
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88
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89 GTK+ 2.4
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90 (http://www.gtk.org/download/)
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91
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92 libglade >= 2.3.1
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93 (http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/sources/libglade/2.3/)
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94
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95 The following packages are required for optional features:
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96
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97 Vorbis input plugin:
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98 libvorbis >= 1.0
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99 (http://www.xiph.org/ogg/vorbis/download.html)
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100
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101 ESD output plugin:
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102 esound >= 0.2.3
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103 (http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/desktop/2.6/2.6.0/sources/)
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104
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105 ALSA output plugin:
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106 alsa-lib >= 1.0
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107 (http://www.alsa-project.org)
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108
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109 GConf support:
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110 GConf >= 2.6.0
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111 (http://ftp.gnome.org/pub/GNOME/desktop/2.6/2.6.0/sources/)
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112
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113 Taglib:
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114 Taglib >= 1.4
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115
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116 If you compile Audacious from a fresh CVS checkout, you will also need
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117 the following tools:
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118
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119 automake >= 1.9
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120 autoconf >= 2.59
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121
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122 Note that these tools and libraries are bundled with major Linux
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123 distributions. Use the packages provided with them where possible. If
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124 those packages are not sufficiently new, you may need to search
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125 third-party repositories for them.
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126
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127
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128 2.1 Basic Installation
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129 ----------------------
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130
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131 cd audacious-1.1.0
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132 ./configure
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133 make
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134 make install
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135
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136 This will put the binary in /usr/local/bin and plugins in
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137 /usr/local/lib/audacious/
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138
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139 If you want to use the automatic character detection system, then you should
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140 use --enable-chardet.
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141
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142
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143 2.2 Borderless Installation
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144 ---------------------------
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145
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146 As far as I know most WM's accepts GTK decoration hints so it will
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147 not have borders. But some WM's can't handle this so you have to
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148 set in manually.
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149
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150 AfterStep 1.0 ~/.steprc
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151 Style "XMMS_Player" NoTitle, NoHandles
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152 Style "XMMS_Playlist" NoTitle, NoHandles
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153 Style "XMMS_Equalizer" NoTitle, NoHandles
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154
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155 AfterStep 1.4 ~/GNUstep/Library/AfterStep/database
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156 Style "XMMS_Player" NoTitle, NoHandles
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157 Style "XMMS_Playlist" NoTitle, NoHandles
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158 Style "XMMS_Equalizer" NoTitle, NoHandles
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159
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160 Fvwm's ~/.fvwm95rc
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161 Style "XMMS_Player" NoTitle
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162 Style "XMMS_Playlist" NoTitle
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163 Style "XMMS_Equalizer" NoTitle
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164
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165 CTWM's ~/.ctwmrc
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166 NoTitle and NoBorder sections:
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167 NoTitle {
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168 "xmms"
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169 }
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170
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171 NoBorder {
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172 "xmms"
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173 }
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174
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175 2.3 Skin Installation
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176 ---------------------
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177
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178 Audacious will create a directory called ~/.audacious/Skins/. You can unarchive
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179 the skins the same way as you do for WinAmp.
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180
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181 However, you don't need to as Audacious supports archived skins. Audacious
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182 currently reads the following formats: zip, wsz, tar, tar.gz and
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183 tar.bz2
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184
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185 Just copy the archive to one of the skin path's and Audacious will take care
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186 of the rest.
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187
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188 In order to support zipped skins you will need to have unzip. Unzip
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189 is bundled with most Linux distributions.
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190
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191 Audacious looks for skins in these directories (in listing order):
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192
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193 <prefix>/share/audacious/Skins
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194 ~/.audacious/Skins
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195
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196 You can set the environment variable SKINSDIR to another location of
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197 your choice:
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198
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199 For BASH:
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200 export SKINSDIR=/path/to/Skins:/more/paths/to/other/locations/of/Skins
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201
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202 For CSH:
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203 setenv SKINSDIR /path/to/Skins:/more/paths/to/other/locations/of/Skins
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204
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205
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206 3. Documentation
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207 ----------------
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208
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209 This file or http://audacious-media-player.org
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210
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211
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212 3.1 Controlling Audacious
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213 --------------------
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214
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215 When you start up Audacious, you will get a console very similar to that of
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216 WinAmp.
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217
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218 - On the top is the window title bar. To the right you will see 3 buttons,
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219 Left button will minimize Audacious.
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220 Middle button will make Audacious only display the title bar.
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221 Right button will end the Audacious session.
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222
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223 - The area in the upper left part displays the following:
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224 - Play state: Paused, Stopped, or Playing
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225 - Time elapsed in the current song or if you click on it, the reversed.
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226 - Spectrum analyzer of the sound being played. Right mouse click will
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227 bring up the Visualization menu. Left mouse button will change the
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228 analyzer to an oscilloscope and/or none.
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229
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230 - To the right of the Spectrum analyzer is the title of the file being played.
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231 This also contains the length of the song being played, as well as its
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232 position in the [unsorted] playlist. Right clicking in this window will bring
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233 up a new menu with some more options that are self explaining.
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234
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235 - In the left part of the Spectrum analyzer you'll have letters (at least if
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236 you use the default skin) O A I D V. This is known as the
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237 "clutterbar'. Left-clicking on these will open up menus or perform the
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238 listed actions.
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239 O : Options menu
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240 A : Always on top
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241 I : File info box
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242 D : Double size mode
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243 V : Visualization menu
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244
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245 - Underneath the track title are the following static informational data:
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246 - bit rate in KBps (usually 128 or 112)
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247 - Sample Rate in KHz (usually 44)
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248 - Stereo or Mono channel mixing
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249
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250 - Underneath the informational data are a few controls you can play with:
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251 - The first slider controls the volume
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252 - The second slider controls the balance between speakers
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253 - The button marked "EQ" loads up the graphic equalizer
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254 - The button marked "PL" loads up the playlist editor
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255 - The LARGE slide bar moves from left to right as the song plays. You can
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256 drag this to jump to another location in the current file.
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257
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258 - On the bottom of the console are the standard buttons you would see on a CD
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259 player: Previous track, Play, Pause, Stop, Next track, eject, shuffle
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260 and repeat.
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261
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262 - The eject button doesn't REALLY eject, of course. :) It opens up the
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263 file requester. The File Requester builds a playlist for the current
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264 Audacious session. You can use it to load files, add files to the list, or
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265 load all mp3s in a directory.
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266
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267 - The shuffle button randomizes the sequence of the playlist.
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268
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269 - The repeat button when enabled makes the playlist loop when it reaches the
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270 end of the playlist.
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271
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272
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273 3.1.1 Key bindings
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274 ------------------
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275
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276 Global: (Main, Equalizer and Playlist window)
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277
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278 z = Previous song
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279 x = Play
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280 c = Pause
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281 v = Stop
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282 b = Next song
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283 l = Play file (brings up the Load file(s) dialog)
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284 j = Jump to file (in the existing playlist)
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285 r = Toggle Repeat
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286 s = Toggle Shuffle
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287
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288 Control + h = Play location (url)
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289 Control + p = Preferences dialog
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290 Control + r = Time remaining
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291 Control + o = Always on top
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292 Control + w = Winshade mode
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293 Control + j = Jump to time
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294 Control + z = Start of list
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295 Control + n = No Playlist Advance
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296 Control + 3 = File info dialog
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297
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298 Control + Alt + w = Toggle Equalizer winshade mode
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299 Shift + Control + w = Toggle Playlist winshade mode
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300
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301 Alt + e = Toggle playlist window
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302 Alt + g = Toggle equalizer window
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303
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304 Main window:
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305
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306 Arrow key up = Volume up 2%
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307 Arrow key down = Volume down 2%
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308 Arrow key right = Skip 5 seconds forward in song
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309 Arrow key left = Skip 5 seconds back in song
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310
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311 Playlist window:
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312
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313 Arrow key up = up one step in playlist
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314 Arrow key down = Down one step in playlist
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315
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316 Delete = Remove selected songs from playlist
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317 Page Up = Move one page up
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318 Page Down = Move one page down
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319 Home = Go to the first song
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320 End = Go to the last song
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321 Enter = Play selected song
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322 Insert = Add file dialog
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323 Shift + Insert = Add directory dialog
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324 Alt + Insert = Add url dialog
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325
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326 Equalizer shade mode:
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327
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328 Arrow key up = Volume up 2%
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329 Arrow key down = Volume down 2%
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330 Arrow key right = Balance 4% to right
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331 Arrow key left = Balance 4% to left
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332
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333
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334 3.2 Playlist editor
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335 -------------------
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336
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337 To access the Playlist editor, select the button labeled "PL" on the right
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338 side of the Audacious console.
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339
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340 This will bring up the actual playlist window, here you'll find 5 buttons.
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341 All of these buttons can be held down to bring up an extra menu.
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342 From left to right:
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343
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344 file + : will add a file to current playlist, held down mode you'll have
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345 2 extra options
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346 dir : will let you pick a directory (recursive)
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347 url : will let you add an url for streaming
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348
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349 file - : will delete the highlighted file, held down mode you'll have 3
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350 more options
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351 crop : delete all files except the highlighted in the list
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352 all : delete all files in the list
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353 misc : *** NOT FUNCTIONAL ***
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354
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355 sel all : select all files in current playlist, held down mode you'll have
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356 2 extra options
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357 sel zero : select none
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358 inv sel : invert you selection
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359
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360 misc opts : held down you'll have 2 extra options
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361 fileinfo : opens the file info dialog.
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362 sort : release button on this will bring up another menu with sort options
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363
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364 load list : will let you pick a playlist to load, held down you'll have
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365 2 extra options
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366 save : will let you save your playlist
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367 new : will empty the playlist and let you create a new playlist
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368
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369 If you want to select/deselect files in the filrequester/playlist editor use
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370 CTRL for files and SHIFT key for blocks of files. You can also browse the PL
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371 using the cursor keys and enter to select song. Pressing the delete button will
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372 remove the song from the playlist. If your mouse is equipped with a mouse
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373 wheel, you can use this to scroll up and down.
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374
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375 3.3. Equalizer
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376 --------------
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377
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378 To access the Equalizer, select the button labeled "EQ" on the right
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379 side of the Audacious console.
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380
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381 That will bring up the Equalizer window. It looks like an equalizer on a stereo
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382 and behaves like one as well. Press the button labeled ON to enable the use of
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383 the equalizer, once you turned it on you use it as a normal equalizer.
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384
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385 EQ presets will be saved in ~/.audacious/config when you close Audacious. You can also
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386 have your own presets for different song using the "Preset" button, Audacious can
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387 also import/export from WinAmp's preset files.
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388
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389 If 'Auto' is enabled, Audacious will try to load equalizer presets like this:
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390
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391 1: Look for a preset file in the directory of the file we are about to play.
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392 2: Look for a directory preset file in the same directory.
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393 3: Look for a preset saved with the "auto-load" feature.
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394 4: Finally, try to load the "default" preset.
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395
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396 The 'preset' button will open up a menu with the following options:
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397
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398 Load
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399 Preset : Will open a window with all available presets.
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400 Auto-load preset : Will open a window with all available auto-load
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401 presets.
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402 Default : Will load the default preset.
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403 Zero : Will reset the equalizer to zero.
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404 From file : Will load from a .preset file
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405 From WinAMP EQF file : Will load from a WinAMP equalizer file. If you
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406 choose a library file only the first entry will
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407 be loaded.
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408 Import
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409 WinAMP presets : Imports the presets contained in an WinAMP equalizer
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410 library file (often named WINAMP.q1) and add all
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411 the entries to the Preset window.
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412 Save
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413 Preset : Let you name the current preset and save it.
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414 Auto-load preset : Saves the current settings as a preset for the song
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415 currently playing.
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416 Default : Saves the default value for the equalizer.
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417 From file : Saves the current settings in a preset file.
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418 From WinAMP EQF file : Exports the current settings to a file readable by
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419 WinAMP.
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420 Delete
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421 Preset : Let you delete a preset from the list.
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422 Auto-load preset : Let you delete a auto-load preset from the list.
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423
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424 Configure Equalizer : Change the default names of directory based
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425 preset files.
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426
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427 3.4. Menu
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428 ---------
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429
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430 There are several menu hot spots on the Audacious window. One place is at the left
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431 hand side of the visual window described in sections 3.1 If you click the right
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432 mouse button in the main window, the menus will also pop up (same as clicking
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433 the button on the top left corner).
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434
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435 3.5. Preferences
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436 ----------------
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437
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438 Use the menu to open Options / Preferences or press CTRL-P to bring the
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439 preferences dialog up.
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440
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441 3.5.1. Appearance
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442 -----------------
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443
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444 Skins
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445 In the skinlist you can choose a skin. How to install skins is described above.
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446 Click on a skin in the list to change to it.
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447
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448 Fonts
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449 You can set the font in the main window by setting the 'Player' font. You can
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450 change the playlist font by setting the 'Playlist' font.
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451
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452 Miscellaneous
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453 Show track numbers in playlist - Enable/disable displaying of track numbers in
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454 the playlist.
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455 Use custom cursors - Enable/disable custom cursors set by the skin.
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456
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457
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458 3.5.2. Mouse
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459 ------------
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460
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461 Mouse wheel
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462 Change how Audacious handles scroll behaviours.
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463
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464 3.5.3. Playlist
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465 ---------------
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466
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467 Filename
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468 Convert underscores to blanks - Converts '_' (underscores) to ' ' in the
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469 playlist.
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470 Convert %20 to blanks - Converts '%20' to ' ' in the
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471 playlist.
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472
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473 Metadata
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474 Load metadata from playlists and files - Loads metadata from files and
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475 playlists (e.g. ID3 tags).
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476
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477 Playback
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478 Don't advance in playlist - Don't advance to the next song in the playlist when
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479 the current song ends.
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480 Pause between songs - Set the time (in secons) to pause on songchange
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481
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482 Song display
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483 Title format - Choose the format to display the song names in the playlist.
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484 Custom string - When the above option is set to 'Custom' insert a string of
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485 substitutes here.
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486
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487 3.5.6. Plugins
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488 --------------
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489
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490 Enable/disable and configure plugins in this section.
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491
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492 Choose a tab to list one of the types of plugins:
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493 - Media (filetype/device support)
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494 - General (general plugins)
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495 - Visualization (visualization plugins)
|
|
496 - Effects (effect plugins)
|
|
497 - Output (output plugins)
|
|
498
|
|
499 3.6 Plugins
|
|
500 -----------
|
1174
|
501 Plugins is what makes Audacious work, by moving most of the code out of Audacious and
|
|
502 into a plugin architecture it's possible to change almost everything in Audacious.
|
0
|
503 There are today 5 different types of plugins. Only a few plugins are
|
1174
|
504 distributed with Audacious, you can find information on more of them at:
|
0
|
505
|
1174
|
506 http://audacious-media-player.org
|
0
|
507
|
|
508
|
|
509 3.6.1 Input plugins
|
|
510 -------------------
|
|
511 The input plugins is what you use to play mp3, mod, wav and even movies with.
|
|
512
|
|
513
|
|
514 3.6.1.1 Cd Audio Player
|
|
515 -----------------------
|
1427
|
516 Plays audio cd's on Linux, FreeBSD and Solaris. This plugin typically does not
|
|
517 pass the sound through Audacious, so no visualization can be made nor will the
|
|
518 equalizer settings have any effect. It can however, be configured to do so.
|
0
|
519
|
|
520 Before I explain the usage we better have a look on the configuration
|
|
521 first.
|
|
522
|
|
523 In the device tab you should set Device to your cdrom unit. /dev/cdrom
|
|
524 is generally a good choice on Linux systems. Set 'Directory' to where a
|
1174
|
525 directory which will be used by Audacious to present the available cd tracks in.
|
0
|
526 Using the normal mount point for the cdrom is recommended unless the
|
|
527 cdrom is automounted if it contains a data track.
|
|
528
|
|
529 Example:
|
|
530 --------
|
|
531 Device: /dev/cdrom (which on my system is symlinked to /dev/hdc)
|
|
532 Directory: /mnt/cdrom
|
|
533
|
|
534 The next setting is used to decide what volume is to be changed, it's either
|
|
535 the OSS Mixer for CD Audio or the actual volume on the CDROM.
|
|
536
|
|
537 In the CD Info tab you can choose if the plugin should try and get the
|
|
538 track names from a Internet database server.
|
|
539
|
|
540 You can either use the CDDB protocol or CD Index. CDDB defaults to a free
|
|
541 version of CDDB, but it will work with the infamous cddb servers as well.
|
|
542
|
|
543 Show network window will display some useful information if something goes
|
|
544 wrong, but you'll have to close and re-open it to update the content of it.
|
|
545
|
|
546 If a CDDB server is too slow for your taste, you can press 'Get server list'
|
|
547 to receive a list of alternate servers.
|
|
548
|
|
549 CD Index is another type of database, but works in a similar manner. If
|
|
550 you don't have libxml installed when you compiled the plugin, this will be
|
|
551 grayed out.
|
|
552
|
|
553 In the "Track names" box you can decide on how the plugin presents the
|
|
554 tracks to you. This is normally handled by the 'Title' (section 3.5.6) setting
|
|
555 in the main preferences, but you can choose to override them here.
|
|
556
|
|
557 Available variables are:
|
|
558
|
|
559 %p = Performer/Artist %t = Track name
|
|
560 %a = Album %n = Track number
|
|
561
|
|
562 So "%n. %t / %p (%a)" would display something like:
|
|
563
|
|
564 1. New Life / Depeche Mode (Speak & Spell)
|
|
565
|
|
566 Now to add your CDROM tracks to the playlist. Insert an audio cd into the
|
|
567 CDROM drive and press the Eject button. Go to the directory which you defined
|
|
568 earlier ( /mnt/cdrom ) and you should see a list of tracks. They will be named
|
|
569 Track XX.cda, select the tracks you want to play and press OK. If you had
|
1174
|
570 choosed an Internet database and the CD exists in it, Audacious will now display
|
0
|
571 the tracks you have chosen with their names according to the 'Name format'
|
|
572 configuration.
|
|
573
|
|
574 Now, that wasn't hard now was it?
|
|
575
|
1174
|
576 If you want Audacious to identify as something else when speaking with servers, you
|
|
577 can set the environmental variable "XMMS_CDDB_CLIENT_NAME", and Audacious will use
|
0
|
578 that instead.
|
|
579
|
|
580
|
|
581 3.6.1.2 MPEG Layer 1/2/3 player
|
|
582 -------------------------------
|
|
583 The main reason why this player exists today is mp3 files, so what could be
|
|
584 better than a plugin that plays them?.
|
|
585
|
1427
|
586 It's loosely based off the mpg123 engine and handles MPEG Layer 1/2/3 files and
|
0
|
587 VBR (variable bit rate) MP3 files.
|
|
588
|
|
589 The first configuration tab is just like the MikMod one, and again, if you
|
|
590 have an older soundcard and the music is going half speed, change the
|
|
591 'Resolution' setting.
|
|
592
|
|
593 If you have mp3 files named something else than .mp3, you might want to enable
|
1174
|
594 'Detect files by content' so Audacious will know that they are supported. Although
|
0
|
595 I'd recommend that you rename the files (or just beat the person who burned his
|
|
596 high-school bands music with in proper file extensions into giving you a new
|
|
597 cd) since this is rather slow.
|
|
598
|
1174
|
599 In the streaming tab you can choose a 'Buffer size' in kilobytes which Audacious
|
0
|
600 will keep while streaming. This ranges from 4 -> 4096kb (which should be
|
|
601 sufficient for most people. The 'Pre-buffer' value is how much of the buffer
|
1174
|
602 Audacious should fill before starting to play the stream. (0%-90%)
|
0
|
603
|
|
604 I'll let Chad Armstrong describe the two following options.
|
|
605
|
|
606 "As streaming becomes more popular, there is rising demand for better
|
|
607 information about the current track being played. This 'Now Playing'
|
|
608 information (also known as 'Title Streaming') allows for more information to be
|
|
609 passed back to the listener. In the past, there was a method started by the
|
|
610 Shoutcast group, which embedded this information in the stream itself. The mp3
|
|
611 standard was never designed to allow for text information to be interleaved
|
|
612 with audio data, and it is this design which can cause errors in playback. The
|
|
613 Icecast Team has taken this data completely out of the mp3 data, and has
|
|
614 provided it in a side channel (via UDP)."
|
|
615
|
|
616 - Chad Armstrong (icemonk)
|
|
617
|
|
618 You're better off having both these options enabled. :)
|
|
619
|
1174
|
620 In the 'Title' tab you can change the way Audacious presents the mp3 files to the
|
0
|
621 playlist.
|
|
622
|
|
623 ID3 is data stored in the mp3 file and can include Artist, Album etc. If you
|
1174
|
624 uncheck 'Use ID3 tags' Audacious will display the filename instead of the ID3
|
0
|
625 information.
|
|
626
|
|
627 ID3V2 allows for a lot of extra data to be stored in the mp3 file, and don't
|
1174
|
628 suffer from the limitations of ID3V1, Audacious supports the same data that are
|
0
|
629 available in ID3V1 but not the extra data. If a mp3 file contains both ID3V1
|
|
630 and ID3V2 tags, you might see something different that the 'file info' editor
|
|
631 displays. If this happens, you might want to turn on 'Disable ID3V2 tags'.
|
|
632
|
|
633 'Override generic titles' is used if you do not want to use the generic titles
|
|
634 defined in the preferences. See section 3.5.6.
|
|
635
|
|
636 The 'ID3 format:' box allows you to alter in which order the information about
|
|
637 the current song is displayed.
|
|
638
|
|
639 Example: %p - %t (%a) [%y]
|
|
640 will display something like "Laibach - Alle Gegen Alle (Nato) [1994]"
|
|
641
|
|
642 available fields are:
|
|
643
|
|
644 %p - Artist (ex: Laibach)
|
|
645 %a - Album (ex: Nato)
|
|
646 %f - File name (ex: laibach-allegegenalle)
|
|
647 %F - File path (ex: /home/thomas/mp3)
|
|
648 %e - File extension (ex: mp3)
|
|
649
|
|
650 %t - Track name (ex: Alle Gegen Alle)
|
|
651 %n - Track number (ex: 6)
|
|
652 %y - Year (ex: 1994)
|
|
653 %g - Genre (ex: Electronic)
|
|
654 %c - Comment (ex: Cover of D.A.F)
|
|
655
|
|
656
|
|
657 3.6.1.3 Ogg Vorbis Player
|
|
658 -------------------------
|
|
659
|
|
660 Plays OGG Vorbis encoded files, see http://www.xiph.org/ogg/vorbis/index.html
|
|
661 for more information.
|
|
662
|
|
663
|
|
664 3.6.1.4 WAV player
|
|
665 -------------------
|
|
666 This plugin plays as suggested, wave files. It supports 16bit and 8bit PCM wave
|
|
667 files.
|
|
668
|
|
669
|
|
670 3.6.2 Output plugins
|
|
671 --------------------
|
|
672 This type of plugins is what is used to send the audio data to your soundcard
|
|
673 or alternative devices.
|
|
674
|
|
675
|
|
676 3.6.2.1 OSS Driver
|
|
677 ------------------
|
|
678 This plugin is probably what most of you will use if your system is equipped
|
|
679 with the OpenSoundSystem (www.opensound.com) drivers or compatible.
|
|
680 Compatible drivers are ALSA with their OSS emulation, and Linux kernel sound
|
|
681 drivers.
|
|
682
|
1174
|
683 In the 'Devices' tab you can change the soundcard which Audacious is going to use.
|
|
684 If your driver have more than one dsp, you can change the one Audacious uses by
|
0
|
685 enabling 'Use alternate device' and changing the '/dev/dsp' to suit your needs.
|
|
686
|
|
687 If you have changed your Audio Device to another soundcard (if you for some
|
|
688 reason have two cards) don't forget to change the 'Mixer device' setting to the
|
|
689 soundcard you want to use.
|
|
690
|
|
691 In the 'Buffering' tab you can change how much data the OSS plugin will buffer.
|
|
692 The 'Buffer size' ranges from 200 - 10000ms. If you want the plugin to wait for
|
|
693 the buffer to be filled before it starts playing the music change the 'Pre-
|
|
694 buffer' value, this ranges from 0% - 90% of the 'Buffer size' value.
|
|
695
|
1174
|
696 In the 'Mixer' tab you can change which volume setting Audacious should change when
|
|
697 you alter the volume from Audacious. Enable 'Volume controls Master not PCM' if you
|
|
698 want Audacious to change the volume of all sounds instead of only PCM/wave sound.
|
0
|
699
|
|
700
|
|
701 3.6.2.2 eSound Output
|
|
702 ---------------------
|
|
703 The 'ESD' plugin will use the 'Enlightened Sound Daemon' to playback the audio.
|
|
704 It's useful if you want to be able to have sound effects in your programs and
|
1174
|
705 still be able to listen to music with Audacious.
|
0
|
706
|
|
707 In the 'Server' tab of the configuration, you can tell the plugin where to send
|
|
708 the audio data. Enable 'Use remote host' and enter the name/ip of the server
|
|
709 and port to send to. This is probably only useful in a LAN environment, since
|
|
710 the audio data is sent uncompressed to the remote ESD.
|
|
711
|
|
712 The 'Buffering' tab works just like the 'OSS Driver' one.
|
|
713
|
|
714
|
|
715 3.6.2.3 BSD Sun Output
|
|
716 ----------------------
|
|
717 The 'Sun' output plugin will use the native audio(4) interface provided
|
|
718 by OpenBSD and NetBSD for playback and mixing.
|
|
719
|
|
720 The $AUDIODEVICE and $MIXERDEVICE environment variables will override the
|
|
721 current configuration settings. Defaults are /dev/audio and /dev/mixer.
|
|
722
|
|
723 In the 'Devices' tab you can change the audio, audioctl and mixer devices
|
1174
|
724 Audacious is going to use. The audioctl device is used for ioctl(2) calls
|
0
|
725 independent of audio data I/O.
|
|
726
|
|
727 In the 'Buffering' tab you can change how much data the Sun plugin will
|
|
728 buffer. The 'Buffer size' ranges from 200 - 10000ms. If you want the plugin
|
|
729 to wait for the buffer to be filled before it starts playing the music,
|
|
730 change the 'Pre-buffer' value, this ranges from 0% - 90% of the 'Buffer size'
|
|
731 value.
|
|
732
|
|
733 In the 'Mixer' tab you can select the volume device to be affected when you
|
1174
|
734 alter the volume from Audacious. `Audacious uses mixer exclusively' causes Audacious to
|
0
|
735 keep the mixer device open instead of re-opening it for each operation.
|
|
736
|
|
737 There may also be some more options depending on what your audio mixer
|
|
738 device supports (eg. loudness, spatial, surround, preamp).
|
|
739
|
|
740 In the 'Status' tab you can see audio device information and real-time
|
|
741 playback status.
|
|
742
|
|
743
|
|
744 3.6.3 Effect plugins
|
|
745 --------------------
|
|
746 Effect plugins can alter the sound of the music you are listening to.
|
|
747
|
|
748
|
|
749 3.6.4 General plugins
|
|
750 ---------------------
|
1174
|
751 Mostly used for controlling Audacious and passing data to other programs.
|
0
|
752
|
|
753
|
|
754 3.6.5 Visualization plugins
|
|
755 ---------------------------
|
|
756 Eye candy plugins.
|
|
757
|
|
758
|
|
759 3.6.5.1 Blur scope
|
|
760 -------------------
|
|
761 A simple blurring oscilloscope, in the configuration you can change the color
|
|
762 with the standard GTK color dialog.
|
|
763
|
|
764
|
|
765 4. Command Line Options
|
|
766 -----------------------
|
|
767
|
|
768 beep-media-player --help will produce:
|
|
769
|
|
770 Usage: beep-media-player [options] [files] ...
|
|
771
|
|
772 Options:
|
|
773 --------
|
|
774
|
|
775 -h, --help Display this text and exit.
|
1174
|
776 -n, --session Select Audacious/XMMS session (Default: 0)
|
0
|
777 -r, --rew Skip backwards in playlist
|
|
778 -p, --play Start playing current playlist
|
|
779 -u, --pause Pause current song
|
|
780 -s, --stop Stop current song
|
|
781 -t, --play-pause Pause if playing, play otherwise
|
|
782 -f, --fwd Skip forward in playlist
|
|
783 -e, --enqueue Don't clear the playlist
|
|
784 -m, --show-main-window Show the main window
|
|
785 -v, --version Print version number and exit.
|
|
786
|
|
787 You can specify files on the command line, e.g:
|
|
788
|
|
789 beep-media-player file1.mp3 file2.mp3 file3.mp3
|
|
790 beep-media-player *.mp3
|
|
791 beep-media-player playlist.m3u (note: playlists must be named .m3u)
|
|
792
|
1174
|
793 If you do this while Audacious is running the current playlist
|
0
|
794 will be cleared and the files/playlist specified on the command
|
|
795 line will be used instead.
|
|
796
|
|
797 To keep the current playlist intact use the -e option.
|
|
798
|
|
799
|
|
800 5. Features
|
|
801 -----------
|
|
802
|
|
803 5.1 Supported File formats
|
|
804 -------------------------
|
|
805
|
|
806 OGG Vorbis
|
|
807 MP2 and MP3 streams
|
|
808 WAV/AU samples
|
|
809
|
|
810 Others:
|
|
811
|
|
812 CD audio
|
|
813 Shout/Icecast
|
|
814
|
|
815
|
|
816 5.2 Supported Features
|
|
817 ----------------------
|
|
818
|
|
819 Seeking in files
|
|
820 Volume/Balance
|
|
821 Shuffle play
|
|
822 Repeat play
|
|
823 Playlist editor
|
|
824 Spectrum Analyzer
|
|
825 One Line mode al'a WinShade in WinAmp
|
|
826 Oscilloscope
|
|
827 Timer Elapsed/Timer Remaining
|
|
828 Plug-in system Output/Input/Effect/General/Visualization
|
|
829 Equalizer
|
|
830 Double Size option
|
|
831 WinAmp 2.0 skin support (can use wsz files)
|
|
832 GTK Requesters (with theme support)
|
|
833 Streaming/Shoutcast(1.0/1.1)/Icecast support
|
|
834 Auto remove borders if the WM has support for it
|
|
835 Fast jump in playlist
|
|
836 Scroll wheel support
|
|
837 Saves HTTP streams to HD
|
|
838 HTTP authentication
|
|
839 Plays MPEG layer 1/2/3, WAV, Ogg Vorbis
|
|
840 Compiles and works on other Unixes
|
|
841 Proxy authentication support
|
|
842
|
|
843
|
1174
|
844 6. Obtaining Audacious
|
0
|
845 -------------------
|
|
846
|
|
847 Currently, we only provide source tarballs at:
|
|
848
|
1174
|
849 http://audacious-media-player.org/Downloads
|
0
|
850
|
1174
|
851 The Subversion snapshots listed are not regularly updated. We
|
|
852 encourage you to download Audacious straight from our SVN repository:
|
0
|
853
|
1174
|
854 svn co http://svn.atheme.org/audacious/trunk audacious-devel
|
|
855
|
0
|
856
|
|
857 6.1 Obtaining Skins
|
|
858 -------------------
|
|
859
|
1174
|
860 You can find Audacious/XMMS skins made by Audacious/XMMS users at:
|
0
|
861
|
|
862 http://www.xmms.org/skins.html
|
|
863 http://themes.org/skins/xmms
|
|
864
|
1174
|
865 You can find more places on our website, at:
|
|
866
|
|
867 http://audacious-media-player.org/Skins
|
|
868
|
0
|
869
|
|
870 7. Misc
|
|
871 -------
|
|
872
|
|
873 7.1. Tips and Tricks
|
|
874 -------------------
|
|
875
|
|
876 If you have a windows partition with WinAmp installed, a good idea would be to
|
|
877 set the SKINSDIR variable to that dir.
|
|
878
|
1174
|
879 Audacious features some command line options like next/previous songs, those
|
0
|
880 things can be binded to a key. I use AfterStep and the useless window keys
|
|
881 for this. Here is an example from my .steprc:
|
|
882
|
1174
|
883 Key Meta_R A N Exec "Audacious" audacious -r
|
|
884 Key Menu A N Exec "Audacious" audacious -f
|
0
|
885
|
|
886 If you want all your mp3's in one playlist an easy way is:
|
|
887 locate .mp3 > /path/to/playlistname
|
|
888
|
|
889 (considering you have a fairly recent updatedb, don't blame us if locate don't
|
|
890 find the file you downloaded 3 minutes ago)
|
|
891
|
|
892
|
|
893 8. Bugs
|
|
894 -------
|
|
895
|
1174
|
896 Audacious is under heavy development and as such, has quite a number of
|
0
|
897 bugs. Our bug tracker page is maintained at:
|
|
898
|
1174
|
899 http://bugs.audacious-media-player.org/
|
0
|
900
|
|
901 It will continue to have bugs as we fix and introduce new ones through
|
|
902 rewriting and enhancement. Help us along by reporting new bugs, and
|
|
903 verifying existing ones.
|
|
904
|
|
905
|
1174
|
906 9. Contact Emails
|
|
907 -----------------
|
0
|
908
|
|
909 Project Admins:
|
|
910
|
1174
|
911 William Pitcock email: nenolod at nenolod.net
|
|
912 Tony Vroon email: chainsaw at gentoo.org
|
0
|
913
|