Each emulated Wiimote can have its speaker routed from left to right via the "Speaker Pan" setting in the emulated wiimote settings dialog. Use any value from -127 for leftmost to 127 for rightmost with 0 being the centre.
Added code in the InputConfig to use a spin control for non-boolean values.
Defaulted the setting of "Enable Speaker Data" to disabled.
The Wiimotes are positioned as follows:
Wiimote 0 = Center
Wiimote 1 = Left
Wiimote 2 = Right
Wiimote 3 = Center
The Wiimote speaker output can be disabled via the "Enable Speaker Data" checkbox in the Wiimote settings.
It was only used for Windows XP and lower.
This also bumps the _WIN32_WINNT define in the stdafx precompiled headers to set the minimum version as Windows Vista.
The two instances of this class were sharing a frac variable causing
audio glitches when both were running (which is now all the time).
Fixes issue 7463 (Since DTK merge, audio has staic in it).
The code actually handles this case correctly; the algorithm is linear
interpolation between the two closest samples, and the way it is written
should work correctly with any ratio.
The primary motivation here is to make sure we submit samples from the
CPU thread. This makes sure the timing of related interrupts accurate,
and generally keeps the different kinds of audio synchronized. This will also
allow improvements to audio dumping functionality.
The new code is also more concise because it gets rid of some duplicated
audio mixing code.
This reverts commit 4990b8910bc0fe5d576f92396f761a79b3f1a7e3.
The commit is causing substantial performance issues for the DSound
backend which I somehow didn't catch during testing.
Pretty straightforward; IDirectSoundNotify lets you register for
notifications after a certain amount of sound has played, so use that
instead of depending on Update() notifications from the CPU thread.
Also, while I'm here, reduce the buffer size by a factor of 4; this seems
to reduce the latency, although the difference is sort of subtle.
This is good for a couple of reasons: one, it gets rid of duplicated code,
and two, DSP emulation shouldn't need to interact with audio in the first
place.