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Raymond Camden
Raymond Camden

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Working with Audio in NativeScript - Part Two

A few days ago I blogged about my experience working with audio and NativeScript (Working with Audio in NativeScript - Part One). Over the weekend I got a chance to wrap up the demo application I was working on and thought I’d share the result. As always, my work ends up being a mix of stuff I think went well and stuff I think… could be done better. I’ll do my best to call out the code I think could be improved and would love any suggestions or comments.

As a reminder, the end goal of this research was to create a custom sound board application. As a user, you would record a sound to play back later. Sound boards are a dime a dozen on app stores but I always thought it would be fun to have one I could setup myself. Normally I think this when one of my kids say something funny and then they never say it again. Because of course.

Here’s how the application ended up looking. The UI/UX is rather simple and I didn’t bother with nice colors or anything. Initially, the application lets you know you don’t have any sounds ready:

Initial screen of the application showing no sounds are avilable

Clicking the “Record New Sounds” (really should be singular) button takes you to the next view:

Page where you record a new sound

In this view you name and record your sound. The play button lets you test to ensure you got it right.

Once you’ve recorded a few sounds, they show up in a simple list on the main page:

The list of recorded sounds

Finally, to delete a sound (and the UI should provide a hint for this), you “long press” on a sound:

Demonstration of the delete dialog

And that’s it. So really the app came down to two core aspects:

First was recording audio to the file system and playing it later. This was really easy and covered in my last post so I won’t go deep into it here.

The next aspect was remembering your sounds. This one was a bit trickier. I wanted to let you assign names to each sound and hide the actual file names from the user. NativeScript supports some nice client-side storage methods (you can read my article on it!) so the only question was which would I use. In this case, I made a decision I think may not be best. I went with ApplicationSettings. In general my “rule” for picking between a simple key/value system and a “proper” storage system is - will my data grow based on the user’s use of the application? What I mean is - a set of “know” values like, “preferred theme” or “last product viewed” is a particular set of data that doesn’t grow over time. Data like notes, where the user can write a million a day or so, have no limit.

In my case, it is possible for the user to create a million sounds (ok, not a million) but I figured reasonably they wouldn’t make more than thirty. I was only storing a name and a file path so I figure a JSON array of that size would be “ok”.

I reserve the right to call myself stupid for this decision later on. Ok, let’s look at the code! You can find the complete repository at https://github.com/cfjedimaster/ns-soundboard.

I’ll start with the home view, trimmed a bit to remove unnecessary things:

<template>
    <Page class="page">
        <ActionBar class="action-bar">
            <Label class="action-bar-title" text="Custom Sound Board"></Label>
        </ActionBar>

        <StackLayout>

            <Label v-if="sounds.length === 0" text="You haven't recorded any sounds yet." />

            <ListView for="sound in sounds" @itemTap="playSound">
                <v-template>
                    <Label :text="sound.name" :filename="sound.fileName" @longPress="deleteSound" />
                </v-template>
            </ListView>
            <Button text="Record New Sounds" @tap="goToRecord" />
        </StackLayout>
    </Page>
</template>

<script>
const audio = require('nativescript-audio');
const fileSystemModule = require('tns-core-modules/file-system');

import soundsAPI from '../api/sounds';
import Record from './Record';

export default {
    data() {
        return {
            audioFolder:null,
            sounds:[]
        }
    },
    created() {
        this.sounds = soundsAPI.getSounds();
        this.audioFolder = fileSystemModule.knownFolders.currentApp().getFolder('recordings');
    },
    methods:{
        async deleteSound(event) {
            let filename = event.object.filename;
            let confirmOptions = {
                title: "Delete Sound",
                message: "Do you want to delete this sound?",
                okButtonText: "Yes",
                cancelButtonText: "No"
            };
            confirm(confirmOptions).then(async result => {
                if(result) {
                    // first delete the file
                    let file = this.audioFolder.getFile(filename);
                    await file.remove();
                    soundsAPI.removeSound(filename);
                    this.sounds = soundsAPI.getSounds();
                }
            });
        },
        goToRecord() {
            this.$navigateTo(Record);
        },
        async playSound(event) {
            let player = new audio.TNSPlayer();

            await player.playFromFile({
                audioFile:this.audioFolder.path+'/'+event.item.fileName
            });

        }
    }
};
</script>

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The UI is pretty minimal so there isn’t much to discuss there. I did, however, have some issues with the longPress event. It did not work well on the ListView directive. I had to move to the label. Another issue is that longPress also fires itemTap, which I think is a bug, but honestly felt ok about this for now. It’s something I think I may want to address later. Code wise there’s only a few methods and in general the only real complex one is the delete handler. You can see I set up a confirmation dialog. I then manually delete the file and ask my soundsAPI library (more on that in a minute) to remove the file. Those two lines feel wrong to me. Mainly the issue is that soundsAPI handles just remembering the data but doesn’t handle any file IO.

As I said - it feels wrong and could do with a refactor, but for an initial release, I’m ok with it. ;) Let’s switch gears and look at that sound library. You’ll note I named it soundsAPI which feels like a bad name, but names are hard.

const appSettings = require("application-settings");

const sounds = {
    getSounds() {
        let json = appSettings.getString('sounds', '');
        if(json === '') return [];
        else return JSON.parse(json);
    },
    removeSound(fileName) {
        let sounds = this.getSounds();
        sounds = sounds.filter(s => {
            return s.fileName != fileName;
        });
        //serialize it
        let json = JSON.stringify(sounds);  
        appSettings.setString('sounds', json);
    },
    saveSound(name, fileName) {
        let sounds = this.getSounds();
        sounds.push({
            name:name,
            fileName:fileName
        });
        //serialize it
        let json = JSON.stringify(sounds);  
        appSettings.setString('sounds', json);
    }
}

module.exports = sounds;

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In the end, this “API” is just a wrapper for one value in ApplicationSettings. What’s nice though is that I can revisit the storage later and keep the API as is. Now let’s look at the second view.

<template>
    <Page class="page">
        <ActionBar class="action-bar">
            <Label class="action-bar-title" text="Record"></Label>
        </ActionBar>

        <StackLayout>
            <TextField v-model="name" hint="Name for new sound" />
            <GridLayout columns="*,*" height="70">
                <Button text="Record" col="0" @tap="record" v-if="!recording" /> 
                <Button text="Stop Recording" col="0" @tap="endRecord" v-if="recording" /> 
                <!-- Note, I was not able to use null and falsy values -->
                <Button text="Play" col="1" @tap="play" :isEnabled="playEnabled" /> 
            </GridLayout>
            <Button text="Save" @tap="save" :isEnabled="saveEnabled" />
        </StackLayout>
    </Page>

</template>

<script>
const audio = require('nativescript-audio');
const platform = require('tns-core-modules/platform');
const fileSystemModule = require('tns-core-modules/file-system');

import utils from '../api/utils';
import sounds from '../api/sounds';

import Home from './Home';

function randomName() {
    return `rnd${utils.generateUUIDv4()}.mp4`;
}

export default {
    created() {
        this.audioFolder = fileSystemModule.knownFolders.currentApp().getFolder('recordings');
    },
    computed:{
        playEnabled() {
            return this.lastName != '' && !this.recording;
        },
        saveEnabled() {
            return this.playEnabled && this.name !== '';
        }
    },
    data() {
        return {
            name:"",
            audioFolder:null,
            recorder:null,
            recording:false,
            lastName:''
        }
    },
    methods: {
        async record() {

            // possible clean up
            if(this.lastName) {
                let file = this.audioFolder.getFile(this.lastName);
                await file.remove();
            }

            console.log('doRecord Called 1h');
            this.recorder = new audio.TNSRecorder();

            let newName = randomName();

            /*
            from the sample app
            */
            let androidFormat;
            let androidEncoder;
            if (platform.isAndroid) {
                // static constants are not available, using raw values here
                // androidFormat = android.media.MediaRecorder.OutputFormat.MPEG_4;
                androidFormat = 2;
                // androidEncoder = android.media.MediaRecorder.AudioEncoder.AAC;
                androidEncoder = 3;
            }

            let options = {
                filename:this.audioFolder.path+'/'+newName,
                format:androidFormat,
                encoder:androidEncoder,
                infoCallback:info => {
                    //apparently I'm necessary even if blank
                },
                errorCallback:e => {
                    console.log('error cb',e);
                }
            };

            await this.recorder.start(options);
            this.recording = true;

            //remember the filename for delete and playback purposes
            this.lastName = newName;

        },
        async endRecord() {
            await this.recorder.stop();
            this.recording = false;
            console.log('finished recording');
        },
        async play() {
            console.log('doPlay called');
            let player = new audio.TNSPlayer();

            await player.playFromFile({
                audioFile:this.audioFolder.path+'/'+this.lastName
            });

        },
        save() {
            sounds.saveSound(this.name, this.lastName);
            this.$navigateTo(Home);
        }

    }
}
</script>

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Alrighty, this one’s a bit more intense. This view lets you record audio and has to use a bit of logic to handle a few cases:

  • First, what do we name the file? For that I use a library to generate a UUID (generateUUIDv4).
  • If you record a sound - and then record it again - we delete the first one. So we have to remember we made a prior sound and clean it up. Note I do not support “clean up” if you use the back button. Oops.
  • You are only allowed to save the sound record if you name it and do a recording. So the button logic gets a bit complex. You can see that in the computed section. Outside of that though most of the code is related to the first blog entry on the topic.

And that’s it! What do you think? Leave me a comment with any suggestions or feel free to submit a pull request to the repository.

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