Name: sox Version: 0.2.3 License: GPL License-File: LICENSE Author: Henning Thielemann Maintainer: Henning Thielemann Homepage: http://www.haskell.org/haskellwiki/Sox Category: Sound Synopsis: Play, write, read, convert audio signals using Sox Description: This is a wrapper to Sox the Sound Exchanger which lets you play, write, read and convert audio signals in various formats, resolutions, and numbers of channels. . The functions call sox commands via the shell, that is, the 'sox' and 'play' executables must be installed and in the path to the executables must be set. . In the past this was part of the synthesizer package. Tested-With: GHC==6.8.2, GHC==6.10.4, GHC==6.12.1 Tested-With: GHC==7.0.4, GHC==7.2.1, GHC==7.4.2, GHC==7.6.1 Cabal-Version: >=1.6 Build-Type: Simple Extra-Source-Files: Makefile unix/src/Sound/Sox/System.hs windows/src/Sound/Sox/System.hs Flag splitBase description: Choose the new smaller, split-up base package. Source-Repository this Tag: 0.2.3 Type: darcs Location: http://hub.darcs.net/thielema/sox/ Source-Repository head Type: darcs Location: http://hub.darcs.net/thielema/sox/ Library Build-Depends: sample-frame >= 0.0.1 && <0.1, explicit-exception >= 0.1.3 && < 0.2, -- that's the way to get compatibility between GHC 6.10 and 6.12 extensible-exceptions >=0.1.1 && <0.2, transformers >=0.2 && <0.6, semigroups >=0.1 && <1.0, utility-ht >=0.0.5 && <0.1 If flag(splitBase) Build-Depends: process >=1.0 && <1.7, containers >=0.1 && <0.6, base >=2 && <5 Else Build-Depends: special-functors >=1.0 && <1.1, base >=1.0 && <2 Hs-Source-Dirs: src If os(windows) Hs-Source-Dirs: windows/src Else Hs-Source-Dirs: unix/src Build-Depends: unix >=2.3 && <2.8 GHC-Options: -Wall Exposed-Modules: Sound.Sox.Play Sound.Sox.Read Sound.Sox.Write Sound.Sox.Convert Sound.Sox.Option.Format Sound.Sox.Format Sound.Sox.Frame Sound.Sox.Frame.Stereo Sound.Sox.Signal.List Sound.Sox.Information Other-Modules: Sound.Sox.Private.Option Sound.Sox.Private.Arguments Sound.Sox.Private.Format Sound.Sox.Private.Information Sound.Sox.System