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Hi everyone, again,I've set up a team, and there is also a mail list that we could (?) keep on the development discussion.
https://launchpad.net/~touchmusicappI'm really new to QML and am still figuring out a lot of stuff, so my code is not beautiful.. I have some questions of the linking in QML. For example the same toolbar is going to be used on each tab, but I consider it rather unnecessary to reuse the same code. Couldn't I move the toolbar code into an external command, and reuse that one instead? It'll make the code a lot cleaner.
Also, is it possible to run an external command from inside QML? I mean like any command that I could run from a terminal.
Vänlig hälsning / Yours sincerely, Daniel Holm IT Consultant Web Developer Student d.holmen@xxxxxxxxx http://www.danielholm.se Den tor 7 mar 2013 21:47:15 skrev Daniel Holm:
That is great! Vänlig hälsning / Yours sincerely, Daniel Holm IT Consultant Web Developer Student d.holmen@xxxxxxxxx http://www.danielholm.se Den tor 7 mar 2013 21:45:22 skrev Michael Zanetti:Hi, FWIW, I ran PlayMee through a Qt5 enabled compiler and replaced the MeeGo components with Ubuntu ones. Because Ubuntu doesn't have a backed for the QDocumentGallery (yet?) I disabled the DocumentGallerySource and re-enabled the SimpleFileSource. That one lets you just browse through ~/Music/ and does not support parsing ID3 tags, Albumart etc. Anyways, It plays music and looks somewhat Ubuntu Touch'ish. The cool CoverCube works, but is a bit off with coordinates. The UI is of course subject to change as its really just copied over from MeeGo. If you want to give it a shot, do this: git clone git://gitorious.org/playmee/playmee.git cd playmee git checkout ubuntu then you can open the .pro file with QtCreator and compile and run it. Make sure ~/Music exists and has some subfolders with albums in it. Would be happy to get some feedback. Of course more regarding the general structure and the source "plugin" API than the UI. Cheers, Michael On Monday 04 March 2013 17:23:38 Michael Zanetti wrote:Hi, I'm in. I already wrote my own Music player for the N9 [1] because the integrated one didn't satisfy my needs (and was closed source so I couldn't contribute in fixing them). I would be happy if we could reuse some bits and pieces, and if its only ideas or learnings on what not to do. Its pure Qt but features a plugin-like interface for sources. There are currently 2 sources implemented: a simple file system browser and one that uses the QDocumentGallery (which represented the internal's player database on MeeGo). However, the interface has been made keeping in mind that it should be able to support other sources too (like, spotify, radio stations etc). I think it should be quite straight forward to implement a source which represents data from qtubuntu-media. If you guys are interested, I will start porting the existing code to use the Ubuntu.Components instead of the MeeGo ones. How does that sound? Cheers, Michael [1] http://notyetthere.org/?page_id=25 On Monday 04 March 2013 10:44:04 Jim Hodapp wrote:Daniel, I would be greatly interested in collaborating with you on this if you are interested. Are you trying to create a music player, or the music player that ships with Ubuntu Touch by default? If you want to produce the default app, let's collaborate since I'm tasked with helping lead that implementation effort within Canonical. If you simply want to create a music app, I'd recommend checking out the current media player lp:mediaplayer-app as well as lp:qtubuntu-media to see how it utilizes the backend that I wrote. There's still big plans for future enhancements to this, and I'd welcome community interest and help. Please feel free to ask me any questions about what currently exists, and I can lend you a hand if you require it. Regards, Jim On 03/04/2013 10:36 AM, Daniel Holm wrote:Hi all, I'm thinking about creating a music application. I'm in an early stage of learning to code for QML to begin with, but I have some concerns for the future. I'm thinking about creating an application that really uses Rhythmbox as an backend, but using $ rhythmbox-client. Since its Ubuntus default music player, I mean. So just a easy UI with buttons for previous, next track, play/pause, stop, playlist and so on. Press a button and a flag to rhythmbox-client is sent. What are you guys' thoughts on this? Is it possible to have rhythmbox running in the background instead of writing a completely new music player?-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.11 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://www.enigmail.net/ iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJRNMFEAAoJENCYE0OpVkFTECQIAKU/++qIRQeBx3zht12M0+GM pvedIlDO1+H54znFvXQij8pckBsWLypd3EeByvZ6uP26ey+ErzqUYdDBG7HzQ98u 7BAVN1ZDafA+Jvx3m3ai0+96hK9EvMSw4PNaDgy0j8iCg8IBMiugw4z0LtEzYNZu A1PEtBsaPGBCRsbLHwVr6DRTGEMA1WFucDenJdaviPuvDpZ+w74T54EdzzORlpZj Fs+r5P0/61JotwbfgwCRnaUOu+h2Nc/I6zFtet0nFtlEVVpayI6aZPCTbdWsO7J8 8bBII71zttN8sIyduE83at2pu8a8BXgLVYEhXK7JldIFQOWhfiBFntHI4asZUzw= =qmIn -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
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