This module provides support for reading and writing AIFF and AIFF-C
files. AIFF is Audio Interchange File Format, a format for storing
digital audio samples in a file. AIFF-C is a newer version of the
format that includes the ability to compress the audio data.
Caveat: Some operations may only work under IRIX; these will
raise ImportError when attempting to import the
cl module, which is only available on IRIX.
Audio files have a number of parameters that describe the audio data.
The sampling rate or frame rate is the number of times per second the
sound is sampled. The number of channels indicate if the audio is
mono, stereo, or quadro. Each frame consists of one sample per
channel. The sample size is the size in bytes of each sample. Thus a
frame consists of nchannels*samplesize bytes, and a
second's worth of audio consists of
nchannels*samplesize*framerate bytes.
For example, CD quality audio has a sample size of two bytes (16
bits), uses two channels (stereo) and has a frame rate of 44,100
frames/second. This gives a frame size of 4 bytes (2*2), and a
second's worth occupies 2*2*44100 bytes (176,400 bytes).
Open an AIFF or AIFF-C file and return an object instance with
methods that are described below. The argument file is either a
string naming a file or a file object. mode must be 'r'
or 'rb' when the file must be opened for reading, or 'w'
or 'wb' when the file must be opened for writing. If omitted,
file.mode is used if it exists, otherwise 'rb' is
used. When used for writing, the file object should be seekable,
unless you know ahead of time how many samples you are going to write
in total and use writeframesraw() and setnframes().
Objects returned by open() when a file is opened for
reading have the following methods:
Return a list of markers in the audio file. A marker consists of a
tuple of three elements. The first is the mark ID (an integer), the
second is the mark position in frames from the beginning of the data
(an integer), the third is the name of the mark (a string).
Read and return the next nframes frames from the audio file. The
returned data is a string containing for each frame the uncompressed
samples of all channels.
Close the AIFF file. After calling this method, the object can no
longer be used.
Objects returned by open() when a file is opened for
writing have all the above methods, except for readframes() and
setpos(). In addition the following methods exist. The
get*() methods can only be called after the corresponding
set*() methods have been called. Before the first
writeframes() or writeframesraw(), all parameters
except for the number of frames must be filled in.
Create an AIFF file. The default is that an AIFF-C file is created,
unless the name of the file ends in '.aiff' in which case the
default is an AIFF file.
Create an AIFF-C file. The default is that an AIFF-C file is created,
unless the name of the file ends in '.aiff' in which case the
default is an AIFF file.
Specify the number of frames that are to be written to the audio file.
If this parameter is not set, or not set correctly, the file needs to
support seeking.
Specify the compression type. If not specified, the audio data will
not be compressed. In AIFF files, compression is not possible. The
name parameter should be a human-readable description of the
compression type, the type parameter should be a four-character
string. Currently the following compression types are supported:
NONE, ULAW, ALAW, G722.
Set all the above parameters at once. The argument is a tuple
consisting of the various parameters. This means that it is possible
to use the result of a getparams() call as argument to
setparams().
Close the AIFF file. The header of the file is updated to reflect the
actual size of the audio data. After calling this method, the object
can no longer be used.