On 27.08.2008, at 16:38, Simon Urbanek wrote:

FWIW the default should be to use "open" because that allows the user to map .wav to any applications they desire, you should not be hard-coding that in your code via -a.
Yes of course. In my script I only check if the command begins with 'open'.

On a similar note sound could do a better job of finding player since most users that deal with audio/video are likely to already have mplayer installed, so checking for mplayer and play may be a good idea.
Yeap.

Finally, playing sound on OS X takes one line of code, so adding a player directly to the package would be trivial (or maybe creating a package that does the playing if desired..).
setWavPlayer is doing this. It sets options()$wavplayer. It simply contains the shell command. The tricky thing is the chosen procedure of findWavPlayer. It tests for hard-coded known applications for a given OS platform. But this could be done better.

The problem here was that the new Macs with Leopard are too fast ;) I tried it out with my old Tiger ppc Mac (1.8GHz) and everthing works fine, but on my new G5 with 8 cores 3GHz it doesn't work.

But I'm just in contact with maintainer. Maybe we find a good solution for it.

Cheers,

--Hans

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