quakeforge/doc/tracklist.dox
Bill Currie 6a7b316572 Put my text editing vim settings into the docs.
Vim's autoformating doesn't like our style of comments, so I have to force
it to do what I want. Having to set the appropriate options every time I
edit a file got to be a RPITA, so time to get the computer to do it for me
:)
2011-09-08 10:17:58 +09:00

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//unfortunately, have to wrap the docs in a C comment for doxygen
// vim:tw=74:formatoptions-=l
/**
\page tracklist Tracklist config file
As \QF supports playing arbitrarily sized audio files, it seemed rather
obvious that \QF should be able to use them as BGM in place of the CD
drive. However, requiring specific names and locations for the files seemed
overly onerous. Thus \QF looks for \c tracklist.cfg in the root of the game
directory (eg. \c id1, same place as \c pak0.pak, \c config.cfg, etc).
Using the following \c tracklist.cfg:
\verbinclude tracklist.cfg
and the following commands in the \c id1 directory:
\verbatim
mkdir music
cd music
cdparanoia -B 2-
oggenc *.wav
rm *.wav
cd ..
pak -vcf quake1-music.pak tracklist.cfg `find music -type f print`
rm -rf music tracklist.cfg
\endverbatim
a convenient pak file can be made of the Quake CD audio. Of course, the
last two commands are optional if you prefer to have the files loose in the
filesystem.
\section tl-format Tracklist format
The tracklist config file is a \ref property-list consisting of a
dictionary mapping the track numbers to the file to be played when that
track is requested. The keys of the dictionary are the track number (the
Quake CD has only tracks 2 to 11 as audio tracks) as a property list
string, and the values are the file to play, also as a property list
string.
However, if the value is an array of strings, that track will
become a playlist, and each file specified in the array will be played in
order, looping back to the first file in the list.
The files may be <code>.wav</code>, <code>.ogg</code> (Ogg Vorbis),
<code>.mid</code> or <code>.midi</code> (MIDI), or <code>.flac</code>
files. MP3 is <em>not</em> supported, and is not likely to ever be
supported.
*/