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For the needs of my game I need to have 2D sound. That means, the emmiter should be positioned somewhere on a 2D plane. How do I achieve this effect in Javascript? Do I need to use a special sound format or can I control the volume on the speakers?

I think I can get to the point where I have 2 volumes for each speaker, but I am clueless as how to apply different volumes for the same sound in Javascript.

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  • 2
    A <canvas> game? Where's the sound coming from? An <audio> element? Jun 27, 2012 at 23:33
  • 4
    Read this: Web Audio API Jun 27, 2012 at 23:38

2 Answers 2

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+25

An article describing exactly this including a demo can be found here.

To prevent link rot I will be quoting the most relevant parts below

Luckily, Web Audio API comes with built-in hardware accelerated positional audio features that are quite straight forward to use.

The core idea is demonstrated in the code below:

PositionSample.prototype.changePosition = function(position) {
  // Position coordinates are in normalized canvas coordinates
  // with -0.5 < x, y < 0.5
  if (position) {
    if (!this.isPlaying) {
      this.play();
    }
    var mul = 2;
    var x = position.x / this.size.width;
    var y = -position.y / this.size.height;
    this.panner.setPosition(x * mul, y * mul, -0.5);
  } else {
    this.stop();
  }
};

The full source code of the working demo in the first link above can be found here.

Offtopic: I considered rewriting the quoted article by hand as a custom answer here, but that seemed relatively pointless as the article is already more than clear enough and doing double work seems pointless


Compatibility wise, only a combination of flash and the previously mentioned code gives a true cross-browser positioning/panning audio solution (as flash is not available on certain mobile devices). Ideally I would advise against use of the audio API if this can be circumvented as it's not unlikely that things will change in the specification, thus possibly breaking your code (+ it's not unlikely for this not to work either way on mobile devices). The only scenario where using the more advanced web audio api's makes sense is if you are expecting to work at least another 6 to 18 months on your game (as that's the likely time it will take for the implementations to even stabalize to a usable point).

3
  • I don't care about compatibility, although I would like my code not to contain any Flash.
    – corazza
    Jul 4, 2012 at 18:03
  • Haha, in that case the above solution is just perfect for you yeah :D (I guess that means you are only doing it to learn from, which is great :D ) Jul 4, 2012 at 19:36
  • Man, you're really trying to sell your "solution". It's just +50pts, take it easy. Relax.
    – MMeah
    Jul 5, 2012 at 13:07
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We've used SoundManager2 at work, at it was a really easy turn-key solutions and well documented API.

http://www.schillmania.com/projects/soundmanager2/

Example:

soundManager.createSound({
 id:'mySound1',
 url:'../mpc/audio/CHINA_1.mp3'
});
soundManager.play('mySound1');

BSD License: http://www.schillmania.com/projects/soundmanager2/license.txt

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  • 4
    For sound pan, you can record just the left or right channel and fade between the two. Any sound editor will allow that. It requires two files, but it's a solution.
    – MMeah
    Jun 28, 2012 at 0:50
  • Doesnt fading between 2 files require exact timing matching, which is sometimes not easily done?
    – wizzard0
    Jul 4, 2012 at 18:49
  • The web audio API does have quite a number of useful tools for that, although you of course can't use the soundmanager library for any serious stuff like that. (See the article in my answer and scroll up a bit for some timing explanations) Jul 4, 2012 at 19:37
  • @david-mulder both JavaScript APIs are just libraries leveraging off of the more advanced HTML5 audio capabilities. But not all users (even now) are using HTML5 ready browsers. There is a place for both APIs, and soundmanager also handles non-HTML5 ready browsers as a fallback. If people already have the latest and greatest installed, then just use a Flash audio API and don't worry about HTML sound. The question was about sound in JavaScript and not just in HTML5.
    – MMeah
    Jul 5, 2012 at 13:04
  • Yeah, I have used the soundManager various times (e.g. for an extensive music player) so I know what I am talking about when I say that it's totally worthless if you are need game sound control. Exactly because it's trying to create cross browser compability it gives up a lot of control. (As I said, look at the article I referenced in my answer to see what's possible). And the question was about sound for a html5 game in javascript (not about a backwards compatible primarily flash solution for music playback). Jul 5, 2012 at 13:27

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