I have a library of 16 short sound clips I need to be able to play in quick succession. I realized that creating and preparing AVAudioPlayer objects in real time was too much to ask of the iPhone.
So instead, during my app's initialization, I am pre-creating a series of AVAudioPlayers so that each one is basically pre-loaded with one of my 16 sounds, so they're ready to be played at any time.
The problem is, to keep this clean, I would like to store the references for these 16 AVAudioPlayers in an NSMutableArray, so I can easily get at them just by knowing their array location. However, the way I'm doing it is crashing the simulator w/no error messages in the log:
Here is how I'm currently setting up the array of AVAudioPlayer references:
// (soundPlayers is an NSMutableArray instance var)
soundPlayers = [NSMutableArray arrayWithCapacity:(NSUInteger)16];
for ( int i = 0; i < 16; i++ ) {
NSString *soundName = [NSString stringWithFormat:@"sound-%d", i];
NSString *soundPath = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:soundName ofType:@"mp3"];
NSURL *soundFile = [[NSURL alloc] initFileURLWithPath:soundPath];
AVAudioPlayer *p = [[AVAudioPlayer alloc] initWithContentsOfURL:soundFile error:nil];
[soundFile release];
[p prepareToPlay];
[soundPlayers addObject:(id)p];
[p release];
}
Then later I try to load, say, sound #8 and play it back:
// (soundPlayer is an AVAudioPlayer instance var)
self.soundPlayer = [soundPlayers objectAtIndex:(NSUInteger)8];
[soundPlayer play];
Any ideas? Also does anyone know if any of the slick debugging tools that come with XCode would be useful for this type of problem?
(id)pand(NSUInteger)16. And please do look for the crash log. Isn't there really anything shown in the debugger console? That never happened to me. – Yuji Jun 19 '10 at 3:11