Hi, thanks for answer.No, so far it is not possible. What is your use case?
I definitely have use cases.No, so far it is not possible. What is your use case?
1. Under some circumstances I want to play a 5.1 source as Quad or Stereo.No, so far it is not possible. What is your use case?
maybe that over S/PDIF was confusing when using HDMI?First of all, I feel there is a problem with terminology here. Previously "Audio Device" meant something like "output encoding". Now it means something like "playback device". Note that for the same "playback device" you can definitely have several "output encodings".
- For instance, the HDMI of my PC is connected to an A/V Receiver, a SONY STR-DN1040. I have MKV files that can output both "Linear PCM" and DTS. Both are good (6 channel) formats, but it is certainly possible to perceive differences between them. In VLC they used to show up as "5.1" and "A/52 over S/PDIF" respectively. The SONY STR-DN1040 can receive both of them. It receives them over the same HDMI cable (naturally), so it is the same "playback device". I personally prefer PCM. I want to be able to choose PCM over DTS. Now I don't even know what algorithm is used by VLC to choose between them.
I need to do this because of my headset (Logitech G930). If audio outputted to it is 5.1 then it's quite hard to hear some parts of the video, particularly dialog. Forcing the audio to output in stereo fixed this completely and I was missing this option in 2.1.0.Greetings,
my basic setup: Win PC, Creative X-Fi, 5.1 soundsystem.
1. Under some circumstances I want to play a 5.1 source as Quad or Stereo.No, so far it is not possible. What is your use case?
2. I want a stereo source to be upmixed to 5.1 by my X-Fi soundcard (which has nice features).
In 2.1.0 a stereo source is upmixed by VLC to the speaker configuration of the output device. In the lower versions the VLC output was stereo, same as the source, and the soundcard could work its own magic.
Also, the VLC upmix is too loud on my rear speakers and can't be controlled.
PS: For now I'm gonna roll back to an older version of beloved VLC
NOTE: This fix only applies to people who have Realtek audio chips on their motherbooard.I just wanted to chime in with my use case. I have a 5.1 speaker setup plugged directly into the motherboard so VLC correctly detects this as a 5.1 system. However when I use headphones with the plug on the front of the speaker (a much more convenient location to plug in headphones) it is only playing 2 of the 4 channels and for many videos this eliminates most of the audio. If there is a way to fix this please let me know but from scouring the forums I couldn't find anything that suggested a way to fix this.
Wow, didn't know these new versions were affecting so many people. Lost SPDIF and posted in another thread, hopefully the team can sort this out!I've downgraded to 2.0.8 as well. I think I'll sit a few versions out and see if videolan ever gets their stuff together. Did the one guy who understands the audio code quit or something?
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