Microsoft KB Archive/110384

= Direct Control of AVI Files from Viewer =

Article ID: 110384

Article Last Modified on 10/13/2003

-

APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft Multimedia Viewer Publishing Toolkit 2.0
 * Microsoft Multimedia Viewer Publishing Toolkit 2.0a

-



This article was previously published under Q110384



SUMMARY
This article describes two methods to play an Audio-Video Interleaved (.AVI) file without a controller, and then have the .AVI window close when the .AVI file is done playing. You can then execute commands when the AVI window closes.

Method 1 describes using the mciSendString command from the MMSYSTEM.DLL that comes with the Windows 3.1 SDK (Software Development Kit). Method 2 describes how to use the standard Viewer ewX statement to play your .AVI file, and how to use hooks to be notified when the video finishes.

METHOD 1
The simplest way to play an .AVI file without a controller and have the AVI window close when the .AVI is done is to use the mciSendString function from MMSYSTEM.DLL that comes with the Windows 3.1 SDK.

NOTE: Using mciSendString causes the .AVI file to be played in a window created by MMSYSTEM.DLL; the .AVI file will *not* be displayed in a regular pane.

You could write a DLL function that calls mciSendString, and call that DLL function from Viewer. To do this you would need to register your DLL function in the [CONFIG] section of your .MVP file. Or you could call mciSendString directly from your Viewer title. In that case, you would need to register mciSendString in the [CONFIG] section.

To register the mciSendString function in your [CONFIG] section, add the following line to the [CONFIG] section of your .MVP file: RegisterRoutine("mmsystem","mciSendString","SUuu") See pages 5-10 and 5-74 of the Viewer "Technical Reference" for more information on using RegisterRoutine.

You can start the .AVI file in many ways, including using topic entry commands, hot spot commands, buttons, and menu items. To create a button to play the COYOTE.AVI file (for example), add the following line to the [CONFIG] section of your .MVP file after the RegisterRoutine function: CreateButton(`btn_avi', `Play AVI', `mciSendString("open  coyote.avi",0,0,0):mciSendString("play coyote.avi   wait",0,0,0):mciSendString("close coyote.avi",0,0,0)') To start an .AVI file on topic entry, have the .AVI window close when the .AVI file finishes, and then jump to another topic, add the following topic entry commands: !mciSendString("open coyote.avi",0,0,0); mciSendString("play  coyote.avi   wait",0,0,0); mciSendString("close coyote.avi",0,0,0); JumpID("myfile.mvb<main","context_string") NOTE: Because the CreateButton function is in the .MVP file, the multiple commands are separated by a colon. If you specify multiple commands in your .RTF file, they should be separated by a semicolon instead. In .MVP files, the semicolon character means the rest of the line is commented out.

METHOD 2
Method 2 uses a message hook to determine when the .AVI file is finished playing. If you play the .AVI file using an {ewX mvmci2, ViewerMCI...} statement, then Viewer's MVMCI2.DLL will ask the system to send an MM_MCINOTIFY message when the .AVI file is finished playing. You can put a message hook function in a DLL, and when the MM_MCINOTIFY message comes through, you could send the ClosePane command to Viewer via the VwrCommand Viewer API (Application Programming Interface) function.

There is a sample in the Microsoft Software Library called VWRHOOK that uses a DLL to implement a message hook to trap MM_MCINOTIFY. If you call SetGMHook in your [CONFIG] section, the hook function will receive a notification message whenever any MCI element is finished playing. The Windows SDK documentation for SetWindowHook and SetWindowsHookEx has more information on setting hooks.

For additional information on the VWRHOOK sample, please see the following article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

114557 SAMPLE: Executing Viewer Commands When MCI Finishes Playing

Additional query words: 2.00 2.00a hotspot

Keywords: KB110384

-

[mailto:TECHNET@MICROSOFT.COM Send feedback to Microsoft]

© Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.