Skip to main content

Play and Record Sound with Python

Project description

This Python module provides bindings for the PortAudio library and a few convenience functions to play and record NumPy arrays containing audio signals.

Documentation:

http://python-sounddevice.rtfd.org/

Code:

http://github.com/spatialaudio/python-sounddevice/

Python Package Index:

http://pypi.python.org/pypi/sounddevice/

License:

MIT – see the file LICENSE for details.

Requirements

Python:

Of course, you’ll need Python. Any version where CFFI (see below) is supported should work. If you don’t have Python installed yet, you should get one of the distributions which already include CFFI and NumPy (and many other useful things), e.g. Anaconda or WinPython.

pip/setuptools:

Those are needed for the installation of the Python module and its dependencies. Most systems will have these installed already, but if not, you should install it with your package manager or you can download and install pip and setuptools as described on the pip installation page. If you happen to have pip but not setuptools, use this command:

pip install setuptools --user
CFFI:

The C Foreign Function Interface for Python is used to access the C-API of the PortAudio library from within Python. It supports CPython 2.6, 2.7, 3.x; and is distributed with PyPy 2.0 beta2 or later. If it’s not installed already, you should install it with your package manager (the package might be called python3-cffi, python-cffi or similar), or you can get it with:

pip install cffi --user
PortAudio library:

The PortAudio library must be installed on your system (and CFFI must be able to find it). Again, you should use your package manager to install it (the package might be called libportaudio2 or similar). If you prefer, you can of course also download the sources and compile the library yourself. If you are using Mac OS X or Windows, the library will be installed automagically with pip (see “Installation” below).

NumPy (optional):

NumPy is only needed if you want to play back and record NumPy arrays. The classes sounddevice.RawStream, sounddevice.RawInputStream and sounddevice.RawOutputStream use plain Python buffer objects and don’t need NumPy at all. If you need NumPy, you should install it with your package manager or use a Python distribution that already includes NumPy (see above). Installing NumPy with pip is not recommended.

Installation

Once you have installed the above-mentioned dependencies, you can use pip to download and install the latest release with a single command:

pip install sounddevice --user

If you want to install it system-wide for all users (assuming you have the necessary rights), you can just drop the --user option.

To un-install, use:

pip uninstall sounddevice

Usage

First, import the module:

import sounddevice as sd

Playback

Assuming you have a NumPy array named myarray holding audio data with a sampling frequency of fs (in the most cases this will be 44100 or 48000 frames per second), you can play it back with sounddevice.play():

sd.play(myarray, fs)

This function returns immediately but continues playing the audio signal in the background. You can stop playback with sounddevice.stop():

sd.stop()

If you know that you will use the same sampling frequency for a while, you can set it as default using sounddevice.default.samplerate:

sd.default.samplerate = fs

After that, you can drop the samplerate argument:

sd.play(myarray)

Recording

To record audio data from your sound device into a NumPy array, use sounddevice.rec():

duration = 10  # seconds
myrecording = sd.rec(duration * fs, samplerate=fs, channels=2)

Again, for repeated use you can set defaults using sounddevice.default:

sd.default.samplerate = fs
sd.default.channels = 2

After that, you can drop the additional arguments:

myrecording = sd.rec(duration * fs)

This function also returns immediately but continues recording in the background. In the meantime, you can run other commands. If you want to check if the recording is finished, you should use sounddevice.wait():

sd.wait()

If the recording was already finished, this returns immediately; if not, it waits and returns as soon as the recording is finished.

Alternatively, you could have used the blocking argument in the first place:

myrecording = sd.rec(duration * fs, blocking=True)

By default, the recorded array has the data type 'float32' (see sounddevice.default.dtype), but this can be changed with the dtype argument:

myrecording = sd.rec(duration * fs, dtype='float64')

Simultaneous Playback and Recording

To play back an array and record at the same time, use sounddevice.playrec():

myrecording = sd.playrec(myarray, fs, channels=2)

The number of output channels is obtained from myarray, but the number of input channels still has to be specified.

Again, default values can be used:

sd.default.samplerate = fs
sd.default.channels = 2
myrecording = sd.playrec(myarray)

In this case the number of output channels is still taken from myarray (which may or may not have 2 channels), but the number of input channels is taken from sounddevice.default.channels.

Device Selection

In many cases, the default input/output device(s) will be the one(s) you want, but it is of course possible to choose a different device. Use sounddevice.query_devices() to get a list of supported devices. The same list can be obtained from a terminal by typing the command

python -m sounddevice

You can use the corresponding device ID to select a desired device by assigning to sounddevice.default.device or by passing it as device argument to sounddevice.play(), sounddevice.Stream() etc.

Instead of the numerical device ID, you can also use a space-separated list of case-insensitive substrings of the device name (and the host API name, if needed). See sounddevice.default.device for details.

import sounddevice as sd
sd.default.samplerate = 44100
sd.default.device = 'digital output'
sd.play(myarray)

Callback Streams

Callback “wire” with sounddevice.Stream:

import sounddevice as sd
duration = 5  # seconds

def callback(indata, outdata, frames, time, status):
    if status:
        print(status, flush=True)
    outdata[:] = indata

with sd.Stream(channels=2, callback=callback):
    sd.sleep(duration * 1000)

Same thing with sounddevice.RawStream:

import sounddevice as sd
duration = 5  # seconds

def callback(indata, outdata, frames, time, status):
    if status:
        print(status, flush=True)
    outdata[:] = indata

with sd.RawStream(channels=2, dtype='int24', callback=callback):
    sd.sleep(duration * 1000)

Blocking Read/Write Streams

Instead of using a callback function, you can also use the blocking methods sounddevice.Stream.read() and sounddevice.Stream.write() (and of course the corresponding methods in sounddevice.InputStream, sounddevice.OutputStream, sounddevice.RawStream, sounddevice.RawInputStream and sounddevice.RawOutputStream).

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

sounddevice-0.3.2.tar.gz (36.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distributions

sounddevice-0.3.2-py2.py3.cp26.cp27.cp32.cp33.cp34.cp35.cp36.pp27.pp32.pp33.pp34.pp35.pp36-none-win_amd64.whl (171.1 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 2.6 CPython 2.7 CPython 3.2 CPython 3.3 CPython 3.4 CPython 3.5 CPython 3.6 PyPy Python 2 Python 3 Windows x86-64

sounddevice-0.3.2-py2.py3.cp26.cp27.cp32.cp33.cp34.cp35.cp36.pp27.pp32.pp33.pp34.pp35.pp36-none-win32.whl (168.2 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 2.6 CPython 2.7 CPython 3.2 CPython 3.3 CPython 3.4 CPython 3.5 CPython 3.6 PyPy Python 2 Python 3 Windows x86

sounddevice-0.3.2-py2.py3.cp26.cp27.cp32.cp33.cp34.cp35.cp36.pp27.pp32.pp33.pp34.pp35.pp36-none-macosx_10_6_x86_64.whl (72.0 kB view details)

Uploaded CPython 2.6 CPython 2.7 CPython 3.2 CPython 3.3 CPython 3.4 CPython 3.5 CPython 3.6 PyPy Python 2 Python 3 macOS 10.6+ x86-64

sounddevice-0.3.2-py2.py3-none-any.whl (30.5 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 2 Python 3

File details

Details for the file sounddevice-0.3.2.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: sounddevice-0.3.2.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 36.2 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No

File hashes

Hashes for sounddevice-0.3.2.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 74128f786f4a2b0da6637dd51e2762ffce235bc6477325d2d6411b03cf543e92
MD5 0983d5a9f9f440fb8b96d6a0ddd330d6
BLAKE2b-256 d567caa4b4dc680e11e42234a7f26f82cc2ed0c30453bd76ff124f7c84c1f221

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file sounddevice-0.3.2-py2.py3.cp26.cp27.cp32.cp33.cp34.cp35.cp36.pp27.pp32.pp33.pp34.pp35.pp36-none-win_amd64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for sounddevice-0.3.2-py2.py3.cp26.cp27.cp32.cp33.cp34.cp35.cp36.pp27.pp32.pp33.pp34.pp35.pp36-none-win_amd64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 fd764275f0b49d11314455a3e5a0fd29651f423e0fed830c9b42d4890a54c7c0
MD5 807e66eb15a04ea730e35ef0843bdd0e
BLAKE2b-256 cebd6742b6aa47240229225fdf4c7137fb10852685874480ad5dec75b33d2aee

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file sounddevice-0.3.2-py2.py3.cp26.cp27.cp32.cp33.cp34.cp35.cp36.pp27.pp32.pp33.pp34.pp35.pp36-none-win32.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for sounddevice-0.3.2-py2.py3.cp26.cp27.cp32.cp33.cp34.cp35.cp36.pp27.pp32.pp33.pp34.pp35.pp36-none-win32.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 455c00318680e0cce0fbe005ca996189c11880414f92008a7ccb4d5657c2e9af
MD5 8f5d7f339f36859e29aa92be0479bbab
BLAKE2b-256 dae0e1845b3a0ebe650a6864f0a62a566ebfbbc7c858fc51c590a27b3b770952

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file sounddevice-0.3.2-py2.py3.cp26.cp27.cp32.cp33.cp34.cp35.cp36.pp27.pp32.pp33.pp34.pp35.pp36-none-macosx_10_6_x86_64.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for sounddevice-0.3.2-py2.py3.cp26.cp27.cp32.cp33.cp34.cp35.cp36.pp27.pp32.pp33.pp34.pp35.pp36-none-macosx_10_6_x86_64.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 be4cf645ef6bfad4e7034b1bfef0741ba9982cdab1919323f4e3163bf6761307
MD5 8d57425ba713d657880b7ad01db28a6d
BLAKE2b-256 ffd3b35e0d7171593997997c3c6bacbddde24270c0e8f910bba5f3d32bac9b72

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file sounddevice-0.3.2-py2.py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for sounddevice-0.3.2-py2.py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 5cf951e33851e7e267d9fe1ebfd5974c71f044ef4092becb027000549ee77f34
MD5 f05bcaf32c65de98b697c31afb03d8fa
BLAKE2b-256 60e77779ead5de72cc8acd4d26395f96169605f1a1c1caeaaf322644dbfa3468

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page