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authorBarry Warsaw <barry@python.org>1999-05-01 16:27:23 (GMT)
committerBarry Warsaw <barry@python.org>1999-05-01 16:27:23 (GMT)
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parent72384014882534aa6497b5f397854fa04f996b0d (diff)
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updates for latest release
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-rw-r--r--Tools/audiopy/README16
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 7 deletions
diff --git a/Tools/audiopy/README b/Tools/audiopy/README
index 1cf3d56..38cdbd7 100644
--- a/Tools/audiopy/README
+++ b/Tools/audiopy/README
@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ audiopy - a program to control the Solaris audio device.
Contact: Barry Warsaw
Email: bwarsaw@python.org
-Version: 0.1
+Version: 1.0
Introduction
@@ -31,10 +31,11 @@ Introduction
Running as a GUI
Simply start audiopy with no arguments to start it as a Tkinter
- based GUI application. It will pop up a window with two sections:
+ based GUI application. It will pop up a window with two sections:
the top portion contains three radio buttons indicating your
- selected input device; the bottom portion contains three
- checkboxes indicating your selected output devices.
+ selected input device; the middle portion contains three
+ checkboxes indicating your selected output devices; the bottom
+ portion contains a slider that changes the output gain.
Note the underlined characters in the button labels. These
indicate keyboard accelerators so that pressing Alt+character you
@@ -48,9 +49,10 @@ Running as a GUI
Unsupported devices will appear dimmed out in the GUI. When run
as a GUI, audiopy monitors the audio device and automatically
updates its display if the state of the device is changed by some
- other means. In Python 1.5.2 this is done by occasionally polling
- the device, but in Python 1.5.2 no polling is necessary (you don't
- really need to know this, but I thought I'd plug 1.5.2 :-).
+ other means. With Python versions before 1.5.2 this is done by
+ occasionally polling the device, but in Python 1.5.2 no polling is
+ necessary (you don't really need to know this, but I thought I'd
+ plug 1.5.2 :-).
Running as a Command Line Program