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Top Forums Programming Designing Interface to handle click event Post 302106609 by reborg on Saturday 10th of February 2007 03:57:12 PM
Old 02-10-2007
The simplest way would be to use the stdin interface to mplayer and feed to appropriate commands to it using a pipe, then you would need only worry about whether or not you are sending the correct commands to it, you could do this using something like php or perl using cgi, which would be simpler to implement than a C program.
 

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TOGEOMVIEW(1gv) 														   TOGEOMVIEW(1gv)

NAME
togeomview - send commands or OOGL objects to geomview SYNOPSIS
togeomview [-c] [-g] [pipename [program args ...]] DESCRIPTION
togeomview sends a stream of geomview commands, or OOGL-format geometric data, to a cooperating copy of geomview. If geomview is not run- ning, it is automatically started. ('geomview' must be on the $PATH of the user running 'togeomview' in order for this to work.) Typical usage is: someprogram | togeomview (to send commands) or someprogram-generating-OOGL-data | togeomview -g (to send geometry) i.e. a program pipes geometric data into ``togeomview''; the data is displayed by a copy of geomview run with the -M option and a name matching the one given to togeomview. Togeomview uses a named pipe in the directory /tmp/geomview to communicate with geomview. If unspecified, the pipe's default name is "OOGL". When sending geometry (-g), a geomview object with the same name as the pipe appears in geomview's object browser. By default, when no suitable copy of geomview is running, togeomview invokes "geomview" with arguments specifying the appropriate named pipe. A different command may be specified as in: togeomview OOGL gv -wpos 300x300 -c my_startup_script which communicates through a pipe named OOGL, and (if necessary) invokes the given gv command. The pipe name is required if a command is specified. After togeomview has created it, the named pipe may be written as an ordinary file. For example, one could use togeomview pipename < /dev/null to invoke a listening copy of geomview, and then run a program which simply wrote to /tmp/geomview/pipename. FILES
/tmp/geomview BUGS
The pipe-based communications scheme imposes several restrictions. If no copy of geomview is reading from the pipe, or if geomview gets far enough behind, a program writing data to ``togeomview'' will be forced to block after sending a few kilobytes. Because of the buffering in the pipe, the sender may be substantially ahead of the geomview display. If geomview exits, the sending program receives a write-on-broken-pipe (SIGPIPE) signal, which will kill it unless measures are taken to catch or ignore that signal. Only one copy of geomview can read from a given pipe at a time. If a second copy attempts to read from it, both will probably fail. It's fine to have multiple copies of geomview reading from different pipes. Note that togeomview will invoke geomview if no extant copy is listening to the relevant pipe; it can't connect to an existing copy of geomview started by other means. SEE ALSO
geomview(1), oogl(5) Geometry Center 21 May 1993 TOGEOMVIEW(1gv)
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