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At 02:53 27-03-2001, Carmelo Montanez wrote:
does anyone here have a working example (or know how) of how the "aural" properties of the xsl-fo work. I read the specs and was looking at "azimuth" but it was not obvious to me how do you define the source of your sound. It's not clear exactly what your question is. To use XSL for audio presentation, you transform your XML into blocks and inline sequences, just as for print. In addition to the visual properties that every FO has by default, there are also aural properties. As with the visual properties, you can override those defaults. The azimuth property controls the horizontal apparent origin of the sound. This can be used, for example, to present multiple people speaking as appearing to originate from different points in space. An angle can be used, or a keyword. The elevation property can be used to control the vertical apparent origin. Obviously, this only works if surround sound is available. HTH, Chris -- Christopher R. Maden, XML Consultant DTDs/schemas - conversion - ebooks - publishing - Web - B2B - training <URL: http://crism.maden.org/consulting/ > PGP Fingerprint: BBA6 4085 DED0 E176 D6D4 5DFC AC52 F825 AFEC 58DA XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
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