srsabu / practicesharp

Automatically exported from code.google.com/p/practicesharp
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1.62 test #11

Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 9 years ago

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
Default volume setting in Practice.Sharp.exe.config does not appear to be read 
by program. This feature worked fine in 1.41.

Original issue reported on code.google.com by kzinn...@gmail.com on 12 Mar 2013 at 1:19

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
Well, I figured out that the ini that is read is located here (thanks to your 
F12 key log)
C:\Users\Ken\AppData\Local\Yuval_Naveh\PracticeSharp.exe_Url_mial4xa4f3042cno3u1
vzoy5m4bs4n1a\1.6.2.0\user.config

When I edit that file, the volume setting is honored. 

Sorry to bother ... 

Original comment by kzinn...@gmail.com on 12 Mar 2013 at 2:03

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
An interesting observation (perhaps not a defect?), so instead of opening a new 
defect issue I am pasting this to my own earlier report. 
My default volume is set to 0.10.  The master volume setting for PC in systray 
is 23. I start an MP3. I want to increase the volume, so I slide PracticeSharp 
volume slider up but only get a moderately small incremental volume 
improvement, even if I take it to 100. I now change master volume down to 22.  
(master volume down, but up would work equally well and note this was the 
tiniest of incremental master volume changes, down one), and now the PS volume 
slider has a much larger range.    
Just tested this with 1.41 and it behaves exactly the same, so I guess this has 
been a feature for a while. Just curious if this is "as designed"?

Original comment by kzinn...@gmail.com on 12 Mar 2013 at 2:31

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
Regd. Comment #2:
I think you might say this is by design - Practice# is controlling the internal 
volume (0.0-1.0) of the output audio stream, but Windows OS has another master 
volume (and in Windows 7, volume per app) in their general audio mixer.
So the final volume is: Internal Application Volume * Windows Master Volume [ * 
Windows Application Volume].

Original comment by yuva...@gmail.com on 12 Mar 2013 at 9:58