I had my hopes up but adding the semicolon to the end didn't help. I have all the files in the same directory and for whatever reason it just refuses to play. I don't even have any errors on the Puredata Log screen. Any other ideas?
Thanks On Tue, Feb 19, 2013 at 3:28 PM, Dafydd Hughes <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Rick > > I think you might need a semicolon at the end of each line in your text > file: > 001test.wav; > 002test.wav; > 003test.wav; > > Cheers > Dafydd > > > On Tue, Feb 19, 2013 at 8:22 PM, Rick T <[email protected]> wrote: >> >> Thanks for all the help/suggestions but I still seem to be running >> into a problem of it not playing the files. I made the changes to >> playlist file and edited the playlist.txt file >> the playlist.txt file has >> 001test.wav >> 002test.wav >> 003test.wav >> >> I've included the the pd patch to see if someone can tell me what I'm >> doing wrong >> >> Thanks. >> >> >> >> On Tue, Feb 19, 2013 at 12:08 PM, Roman Haefeli <[email protected]> >> wrote: >> > On Die, 2013-02-19 at 07:47 -1000, Rick T wrote: >> >> Yes I do have the ability to change the playlist file to a text file >> >> and alter it how it looks. The thing I'm looking for is an example of >> >> gapless playing. I couldn't find one doing google search. >> > >> > You load your playlist (in its most simple form it would be just one >> > filename per line) with [textfile]. You make [textfile] output its first >> > line, feed that to [readsf~]. Then you feed the right outlet of >> > [readsf~] - which bangs when the file is finished - back to [textfile] >> > to make it output the next filename. >> > >> > Roman >> > >> >> On Tue, Feb 19, 2013 at 12:53 AM, Roman Haefeli <[email protected]> >> >> wrote: >> >> > On Die, 2013-02-19 at 00:31 -1000, Rick T wrote: >> >> >> Greetings All >> >> >> >> >> >> I have a playlist file (songs.pls) that I would like to play gapless >> >> >> (without the 1 second pause between tracks) can puredata due this if >> >> >> so is >> >> >> there and example? >> >> > >> >> > It sounds doable to me. I'd do it with [textfile] reading your >> >> > playlist >> >> > which passes each line (after some message mangling) to a [readsf~]. >> >> > My >> >> > only concern is the chosen file format '.pls'. Pd (natively) is >> >> > pretty >> >> > bad in string parsing. If you could use your own format it would make >> >> > things a lot easier. I don't know if you have any constraints there. >> >> > >> >> > The simplest format of such a text file might be as an example: >> >> > >> >> > filename1.wav >> >> > filename2.wav >> >> > whateverfile.wav >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > Roman >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > >> >> > _______________________________________________ >> >> > [email protected] mailing list >> >> > UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> >> >> > http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list >> > >> > >> > >> > _______________________________________________ >> > [email protected] mailing list >> > UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> >> > http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list >> >> _______________________________________________ >> [email protected] mailing list >> UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> >> http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list >> > _______________________________________________ [email protected] mailing list UNSUBSCRIBE and account-management -> http://lists.puredata.info/listinfo/pd-list
