5

I know this is a question has been asked for many times, and I have checked most of the answers related in SO, but I have no luck finding the right answer to my problem.

Here is the problem:

I tried to play a mp3 file (just 2 seconds at most) in a game when some event is triggered, and I use the AudioPlayer to do so, below is the code blocks:

NSError *error;
AVAudioPlayer *audioPlayer = [[[AVAudioPlayer alloc] initWithContentsOfURL:[[NSBundle mainBundle] URLForResource: @"ding" withExtension: @"mp3"] error:&error] autorelease];
if (error)  {
    NSLog(@"Error creating audio player: %@", [error userInfo]);
}
else {
    BOOL success = [audioPlayer play];
    // This always is "Play sound succeeded"
    NSLog(@"Play sound %@", success ? @"succeeded" : @"failed");
}

When I ran this code in iPhone 4s, iTouch 3/4, the sound always played well and clear, but in iPad 1 or iPad2, there is no sound out from speaker. But when I plugged in my headphone, weird thing happened that there is sound from my headphone! The iPad is not in mute mode and the URL is correct.

I am confused why this happened.

PS: I tried the following code (got from HERE) to output the audio output port type:

CFDictionaryRef asCFType = nil;
UInt32 dataSize = sizeof(asCFType);
AudioSessionGetProperty(kAudioSessionProperty_AudioRouteDescription, &dataSize, &asCFType);
NSDictionary *easyPeasy = (NSDictionary *)asCFType;
NSDictionary *firstOutput = (NSDictionary *)[[easyPeasy valueForKey:@"RouteDetailedDescription_Outputs"] objectAtIndex:0];
NSString *portType = (NSString *)[firstOutput valueForKey:@"RouteDetailedDescription_PortType"];
NSLog(@"first output port type is: %@!", portType);

When I plugged in my headphone, the output was "first output port type is headphone!" and when I unplugged it , the output turned out to be "first output port type is speaker!"

It would be great is someone can offer some help or advice.

3 Answers 3

5

There is a code change solution to this, but also an end-user solution: turn the 'Ring/Silent switch' to on. Specifically, the problem is that the default setting of AVAudioSessions, AVAudioSessionCategorySoloAmbient, is to be silent if the phone is in silent mode.

As mentioned by the original poster, you can override this behavior by calling:

[[AVAudioSession sharedInstance] setCategory:AVAudioSessionCategoryPlayback error:nil];

AVAudioSession Reference recommends setting the AVAudioSessionCategoryPlayback category:

For playing recorded music or other sounds that are central to the successful use of your app.

3

To update @JonBrooks answer above with Swift 2 syntax, I put the following in my viewDidLoad() to override the silent switch and get my sound to play:

do {

    try AVAudioSession.sharedInstance().setCategory(AVAudioSessionCategoryPlayback)

} catch let error as NSError {

    print(error)
}
0

Solution found! After I added this line of code before playing, the sound finally is played out from speaker

[[AVAudioSession sharedInstance] setCategory:AVAudioSessionCategoryPlayback error:nil];

I now still do not understand why, and I will dig into it.:)

1
  • OriginalWood, did you discover anything further? I am having a similar issue with an mp3 file being played on the iPhone though the Podcast App as well as the dropbox app. With headphones it plays fine but without headphones (through the speaker) it is distorted. I tried this on a number of other phones and it is the same problem. Seems to me it is how I exported the mp3 or something. May be something for you to look at too is the audio file itself since that appears to be my problem. Have you tried playing that particular mp3 file through one of the standard iOS apps?
    – user1895288
    Dec 11, 2012 at 16:32

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