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Creating and playing sounds

Chuck Walbourn edited this page Mar 7, 2019 · 22 revisions

This lesson covers the basics of playing sounds with DirectX Tool Kit for Audio.

Setup

First create a new project using the instructions from these four lessons to enable the audio engine for DirectX Tool Kit for Audio: The basic game loop, Adding the DirectX Tool Kit, Adding the DirectX Tool Kit for Audio, and Adding audio to your project. We'll be using the result of that process for this lesson.

Sounds

Save the following files to your new project's folder: Explo1.wav, Explo2.wav, Explo3.wav, Explo4.wav, NightAmbienceSimple_02.wav. Use the top menu and select Project / Add Existing Item.... Select each .wav file in turn and hit "OK".

These .wav files are from the XNA Game Studio SoundLab which provides a small collection of sounds under the MS-PL license.

In the Game.h file, add the following variables to the bottom of the Game class's private declarations:

std::unique_ptr<DirectX::SoundEffect> m_explode;
std::unique_ptr<DirectX::SoundEffect> m_ambient;

In Game.cpp, add to the end of Initialize:

m_explode = std::make_unique<SoundEffect>( m_audEngine.get(), L"explo1.wav" );
m_ambient = std::make_unique<SoundEffect>( m_audEngine.get(),
    L"NightAmbienceSimple_02.wav" );

Build and run. No sounds will be heard, but the audio files are loaded.

Troubleshooting: If you get a runtime exception, then you may have the .wav files in the wrong folder, have modified the "Working Directory" in the "Debugging" configuration settings, or otherwise changed the expected paths at runtime of the application. You should set a break-point on new SoundEffect and step into the code to find the exact problem.

Playing a sound

In the pch.h file, add after the other includes:

#include <random>

In the Game.h file, add the following variables to the bottom of the Game class's private declarations:

std::unique_ptr<std::mt19937> m_random;
float explodeDelay;

In Game.cpp, add to the end of Initialize:

std::random_device rd;
m_random = std::make_unique<std::mt19937>(rd());

explodeDelay = 2.f;

In Game.cpp, add to the TODO of Update:

explodeDelay -= elapsedTime;
if (explodeDelay < 0.f)
{
    m_explode->Play();

    std::uniform_real_distribution<float> dist(1.f, 10.f);
    explodeDelay = dist(*m_random);
}

In Game.cpp, add to the TODO of OnResuming:

explodeDelay = 2.f;

Build and run. You will hear an explosion sound effect every 1 to 10 seconds. This is a 'one-shot' sound that you trigger and the audio engine will handle all the voice management automatically. You can trigger the same sound many times at once and each one-shot will play on it's own 'voice'.

The SoundEffect itself must remain in memory as all playback uses the audio data directly from that object. XAudio does not copy the source audio data into it's own buffers, but fetches from the application's memory periodically from a worker thread.

Looping a sound

In the Game.h file, add the following variables to the bottom of the Game class's private declarations:

std::unique_ptr<DirectX::SoundEffectInstance> m_nightLoop;

In Game.cpp, add to the end of Initialize:

m_nightLoop = m_ambient->CreateInstance();
m_nightLoop->Play(true);

In Game.cpp, modify the handling of m_retryAudio in Update as follows:

...
if (m_retryAudio)
{
    m_retryAudio = false;

    if (m_audEngine->Reset())
    {
        // TODO: restart any looped sounds here
        if ( m_nightLoop )
            m_nightLoop->Play(true);
    }
}
...

In Game.cpp, modify the destructor:

Game::~Game()
{
    if (m_audEngine)
    {
        m_audEngine->Suspend();
    }

    m_nightLoop.reset();
}

Build and run to hear an ambient night sound looping in the background. In this case, the SoundEffectInstance has a single assigned voice, so stopping and starting it affects the one playing sound.

Again, the SoundEffect must remain in memory as the audio data is used directly from that object.

Technical notes

We need to ensure that the looping SoundEffectInstance is destroyed before the object it was created from is released. We therefore added an explicit reset to the Game's destructor to avoid being dependent on the order of destruction in the Game class. We also do this after the audio engine has been explicitly suspended since XAudio2 is multi-threaded and references data directly from the application's objects.

Adjusting pitch, volume, and panning

When you use Play on a one-shot sound, you can specify pitch, volume, and panning settings to use for the playback. If you have a SoundEffectInstance you can modify the sound pitch, volume, and panning settings while it is playing.

In the Game.h file, add the following variables to the bottom of the Game class's private declarations:

float nightVolume;
float nightSlide;

In Game.cpp, add to the end of Initialize:

nightVolume = 1.f;
nightSlide = -0.1f;

In Game.cpp, add to the TODO of Update:

nightVolume += elapsedTime * nightSlide;
if (nightVolume < 0.f)
{
    nightVolume = 0.f;
    nightSlide = -nightSlide;
}
else if (nightVolume > 1.f)
{
    nightVolume = 1.f;
    nightSlide = -nightSlide;
}
m_nightLoop->SetVolume( nightVolume );

Build and run. The looping night ambient sound will slowly decrease and increase volume over time.

Using wave banks

Above we loaded the individual sound files as distinct SoundEffect objects, but games commonly have hundreds or thousands of distinct sounds, music, and voice recordings. A more efficient way to manage this data is to make of a 'wave bank' which is a single file that contains a collection of .wav files that can be loaded all at once.

  1. Download the XWBTool.exe from the DirectX Tool Kit site and extract the EXE into your project's folder.
  2. Open a command-prompt and then change to your project's folder.

Run the following command-line

XWBTool -f -o sounds.xwb Explo1.wav Explo2.wav Explo3.wav Explo4.wav NightAmbienceSimple_02.wav

Then from the top menu in Visual Studio select Project / Add Existing Item.... Select sounds.xwb and click "OK".

If you are using a Universal Windows Platform app or Xbox One project rather than a Windows desktop app, you need to manually edit the Visual Studio project properties on the sounds.xwb file and make sure "Content" is set to "Yes" so the data file will be included in your packaged build.

In the Game.h file, add the following variables to the bottom of the Game class's private declarations:

std::unique_ptr<DirectX::WaveBank> m_sounds;

In Game.cpp, modify Initialize:

...
m_sounds = std::make_unique<WaveBank>( m_audEngine.get(), L"sounds.xwb" );

m_nightLoop = m_sounds->CreateInstance( "NightAmbienceSimple_02" );
if ( m_nightLoop )
    m_nightLoop->Play(true);
...

In Game.cpp, modify Update as follows:

...
explodeDelay -= elapsedTime;
if (explodeDelay < 0.f)
{
    std::uniform_int_distribution<unsigned int> dist2(0, 3);
    m_sounds->Play( dist2(*m_random) );

    std::uniform_real_distribution<float> dist(1.f, 10.f);
    explodeDelay = dist(*m_random);
}
...

Build and run. This time the sounds are being played from the wave bank, and the explosion now selects from 4 different exploding sounds at random to provide some variation.

Once again, WaveBank must remain in memory as the audio data is played directly from that object.

Troubleshooting: If you get a runtime exception, then you may have the sounds.xwb file in the wrong folder, have modified the "Working Directory" in the "Debugging" configuration settings, or otherwise changed the expected paths at runtime of the application. You should set a break-point on new WaveBank and step into the code to find the exact problem.

Technical notes

To make use of wavebanks a bit more robust, calls to CreateInstance for 'missing sounds' can return nullptr rather than throwing an exception. This is why we guard the use of m_nightLoop elsewhere. This lets your audio developer mess around with the content of the wave banks without necessarily causing the game to crash.

Wavebank entries can be referenced by a 0-based index or by an optional friendly name if present in the wave bank--this is why we used -f in our command-line to xwbtool above to have it include friendly names. You can also have xwbtool generate a C header with an enumeration for the indices by using -h.

XWBTool -f -o sounds.xwb -h sounds.h Explo1.wav Explo2.wav Explo3.wav Explo4.wav NightAmbienceSimple_02.wav

which would generate a sounds.h file you could use instead of having 'magic' numbers in your code:

#pragma once

enum XACT_WAVEBANK_SOUNDS
{
    XACT_WAVEBANK_SOUNDS_EXPLO1 = 0,
    XACT_WAVEBANK_SOUNDS_EXPLO2 = 1,
    XACT_WAVEBANK_SOUNDS_EXPLO3 = 2,
    XACT_WAVEBANK_SOUNDS_EXPLO4 = 3,
    XACT_WAVEBANK_SOUNDS_NIGHTAMBIENCESIMPLE_02 = 4,
};

#define XACT_WAVEBANK_SOUNDS_ENTRY_COUNT 5

Next lesson: Using positional audio

Further reading

DirectX Tool Kit docs SoundEffect, SoundEffectInstance, WaveBank

For Use

  • Universal Windows Platform apps
  • Windows desktop apps
  • Windows 11
  • Windows 10
  • Windows 8.1
  • Xbox One

Architecture

  • x86
  • x64
  • ARM64

For Development

  • Visual Studio 2022
  • Visual Studio 2019 (16.11)
  • clang/LLVM v12 - v18
  • MinGW 12.2, 13.2
  • CMake 3.20

Related Projects

DirectX Tool Kit for DirectX 12

DirectXMesh

DirectXTex

DirectXMath

Win2D

Tools

Test Suite

Model Viewer

Content Exporter

DxCapsViewer

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