I want to detect is any audio playing from any application using Windows API functions like waveout... or mixer functions. I am going to use it in the program I am writing for Windows CE 6 using C#. Note that I am programming Windows CE so there are some limits, and I don't want to use DirectX.
Need more specification on the device that will be used.
It's not wise to use other things - DirectX is well prepared for common problems, that you will have.
Also please look at Platform Builder - maybe this is more complex but you will know what kind of IN/OUT's you will be using.
I need to rotate an image clockwise only just once after a certain operation. I felt so lazy to include rotating logic to my current image operations class then I come with this idea. What I need is already built within windows explorer, so is it possible to trigger windows explorer's rotate operations within a c# application for a valid file specified?
I have doubts that I can't access to that kind of functionality but I wanted to ask to make sure.
Thanks!
You're better off not relying on the feature since it is not part of the API and can disappear at any time. You should just do your own image rotation.
I don't think its possible to do it with Windows Explorer's integrated photo rotating, but you should check out the awesome image editing/processing library called ImageMagick. The original API is a native windows (dll) API, but there is a good .NET wrapper that is easy to use.
Here it is:
http://imagemagick.codeplex.com/
There are also wrappers for two dozen or so other languages, linked at ImageMagick's site:
http://www.imagemagick.org/
I'm using .NET Compact Framework 3.5 and I'm wanting to crossfade two tracks of music.
The time at which they would crossfade isn't known, the idea is one would loop and something would trigger a crossfade.
I know SoundPlayer can play multiple tracks on top of one another and that (though I've not been able to get it to work), WaveOut is able to control volume (maybe fade?!).
Is there any way of incorporating these functionalites?
Thanks
the audio capabilities built into .NET CF are quite limited. for serious audio capabilities, you'll need to use a separate library - FMOD is popular for this.
.Net CF runs on multiple type of devices with different capabilites. Depending on the specific features of your target device, you might be able to use Windows Media Player activex control. OpenNetCF team has a commercial component allowing to use this activex control from .Net CF.
Using ExternalInterface in AS3 is it possible to call OS (C#?) functions within XP?
Example: Set the desktop background to a image supplied by a flash app?
If it is possible would it be different calls when applied to different OS. And what about cross over the Mac?
Any information would be great
Thanks
If you're launching the swf from within a C# app, external interface will do just fine. Nothing will change on the flash side, but you'll need to go through a couple hoops to get it to work in C#. It's not as simple as AMF or External Interface to JS.
All the communications to C# get converted to XML describing the data, and you've gotta write XML to send back to flash. Other than that though, its relativly simple.
Here's some info on how to do it. The AS portion is Flash 8/AS2, but the C# portion should say the same.
When working with Flash from a webpage or as a desktop app, you are limited to a small security sandbox and you will not be able to make any relevant OS call. I thought that switching to AIR would give the developper more flexibility but it doesn't seem correct either. From "The Pros and Cons of Adobe Air":
AIR apps have
file access, clipboard access, support
multiple windows, support drag and
drop, and can trigger notifications
(toast in Windows). If you app needs
to interact with the desktop in other
ways, the chances are that AIR is not
suitable. For example, there is no
access to COM automation, and no way
to execute external applications. The
reason is to maintain cross-platform
compatibility. That's a worthy goal,
but it would be good to have a way out
of the sandbox. Unlike Java or .NET,
you cannot extend AIR with custom
native code libraries. Nor can you
call operating system APIs.
As Alex Jillard commented, if your swf is called inside a C# desktop application, you should be able to access more OS funcionalities although I'm not sure how.
You could use as already mentioned AIR. Another idea would be to use HippoHX (I haven't written this, the similarity with my username is just coincidence). It runs on top of the NekoVM and gives you unrestricted (so no limitations like in AIR ) access to the system.
i m developing a little tool on my Pocket PC using WM6 SDK but i would like to implement a finger friendly user interface (iphone-like).
So i m looking for a free .NET framework that offers the possibility to easily integrate a finger friendly interface for Windows Mobile 6 Pro .
Any ideas ?
EDIT : Finger friendly means big icons, big buttons , scrollable screens with a simple touch of the thumb... Because the Winforms in Compact framework are made for the stylus, not fingers !!
I know of no such interface API.
I would code such an interface from scratch, overriding Paint and mouse events. If you need more fancy drawing tools that compact framework provides, you should look for pinvoke to access GDI+.
You should really check out Resco's MobileForms Toolkit 2009.
I bet their controls are exactly what you are looking for. Plus they have a whitepaper and videos to show off the controls.
I am not sure it is what you are looking for (I didn't have time to examine it yet myself, but I definately intend to); this UI Framework looks interesting:
http://code.msdn.microsoft.com/uiframework
Check out the Fluid windows mobile controls available at http://fluid.codeplex.com/
This might be what you are looking for, and its open source.
Any current readers on this thread should check out SlideUI (http://www.devslide.com/products/slideui). It's a current (and supported) product which offers touch friendly (iphone-like) scrolling and controls.
I'm not entirely sure what you're asking here... Windows Mobile 6.0 Pro is touch-screen enabled, so you should simply have to create your project targeting the Windows Mobile 6.0 Pro (note, however, that your application will not be compatible with Windows Mobile 6.0 Standard devices).
I know exactly what you are talking about. All the .NET Controls are designed for the stylus. When you make them bigger for the finger, there is no guarantee they will respond well. Add to that every hardware devices sensitivity is different and its even harder.
I recently built an application attempting to incorporate some touch like functionality. it was a pain having hand code all this stuff.
The problem with a 3rd party library, as opposed as coming in Windows MObile is then everyone is designing their own library and navigation techiques. Hopefully MS will wise up on this front.
http://sites.google.com/site/nebowiki/
If you are developing finger friendly apps, your target device needs a process to handle finger input as opposed to the stylus. HTC devices (Such as the Kaiser, Mogul, Touch Pro, etc.) use TouchFlo for this purpose. There are a few different versions of TouchFlo and I'm not sure if there is an SDK, but you need to incorporate it into whatever you program. xda-developers.com will have lots of info about it.
It IS amazing that with WM6.1 Pro, .NET CF 3.5 and VS2008 that all we have available are the basic stylus-sized controls that are are spartan in the extreme. i.e., coyote-ugly. I'm about ready to chew my hand off rather than use them in an app.
So where is the third-party collection of controls that all WM developers are flocking to, to provide touch-friendly apps?
Ugly is truly the correct word for most (mine included) mobile win apps.
I am developing for an older piece of hardware with a mono screen which makes it even worse.
Take a look here:
http://www.windowsfordevices.com/news/NS9328208835.html
and here:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd630622.aspx
This is not free, but it is affordable - some of the screen shots are pretty nice looking:
http://www.basic4ppc.com/?gclid=CIiO1di1nJoCFRAhDQodYX8-9A
Anyway...sorry if this was just googledragging - maybe it had something you had missed.
--Joe
Finger Freindlyness is a result of the touch screen technology (capacitive screens are less accurate, but require zero pressure; resistive screens require physical pressure and are harder to swipe, flick, etc.)
With Windows Mobile 6.5, they have introduced a system gestures library (and if you'd rather not have to P/Invoke it, there is a sample wrapper on MSDN Code Gallery). Theoretically, it would be possible to write to this new library, and maybe emulate the gestures on pre-WM6.5 devices, if required.