Provided by: daisy-player_11.7.3-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       daisy-player - player for DAISY Digital Talking Books or Audio-CD's

SYNOPSIS

       daisy-player [directory_with_a_Daisy-structure |
       Daisy_book_archive] [-c cdrom_device] [-d pulseaudio_sound_device] [-h]
       [-i] [-n | -y] [-v]

DESCRIPTION

       Daisy-player  reads  a  Daisy-CD and plays the audio-files.  DAISY versions 2.02 and 3 are
       currently supported, as well as volumes with multiple books.

       Daisy-player also can play Audio-CD's  and  tries  to  get  CD-information  from  a  cddb-
       database.

       A  list  of items on the Daisy-CD or Audio-CD will appear. Press <ENTER> to start playing.
       When reading of an item has finished, daisy-player will play the next item and the  cursor
       will  automatically  skip  to that item, so that an attached braille-terminal will display
       the name of that item.

OPTIONS

       directory_with_a_Daisy-structure
              One could also give a directory with a daisy structure as argument to daisy-player.

       Daisy_book_in_ZIP_format
              One could also give a file in ZIP-format with a daisy  structure  as   argument  to
              daisy-player.

       -c cdrom_device
              Use  DEVICE  as the CD device. DEVICE is the device special file name of the CD-ROM
              device. The default is /dev/sr0. Be sure the user is a member of the group cdrom.

       -d pulseaudio_sound_device
              Daisy-player will play on this sound device. Default is "0". (The first soundcard).
              Be sure the user is a member of the group audio.

       -h     Display this help and exit.

       -i     Ignore reading of the bookmarks.

       -n     Don't fetch cddb-information of an Audio-CD from the internet.

       -y     Fetch cddb-information of an Audio-CD from the internet.

       -v     Be more verbose, so one can se what's going on while initializing.

SCREEN

       The  name  and  version  of this program and the name of the author will be displayed left
       aligned at the top of the screen. The name of the current loaded book  will  be  displayed
       right aligned.

       The  second  row of the screen will display the number of pages of the current loaded book
       (if any), the current selected level and the total number of  levels,  the  total  playing
       time, the current displayed screen and the total number of screens.

       The  next  rows  will  display  the  title  of the item, the first page of the item within
       brackets (if there are pages) and the  playing  time.  Items  in  higher  levels  will  be
       indented.  (Three  spaces each level.) When "just playing this item" is active, a "J" will
       be viewed at the first column of that item.

CONTROL KEYS

       Daisy-player recognizes the following keyboard-commands:

       cursor down,2
              move cursor to the next item

       cursor up,8
              move cursor to the previous item

       cursor right,6
              skip to next phrase

       cursor left,4
              skip to previous phrase

       page-down,3
              view next screen

       page-up,9
              view previous screen

       enter  Start playing

       space,0
              pause/resume playing

       home,* play on normal speed

       /      search for a label

       d      store current item to disk. (Take into account the selected level)

       D,-    decrease playing speed

       e,.    stop playing and eject

       f      find the currently playing item and place the cursor there

       g      go to time in this item or song (MM:SS)

       G (DAISY-CD)
              go to page number (if any)

       h,?    give this help

       j,5    just play current item and place a "J" at the first column.

       l      switch to next level

       L      switch to previous level

       m      mute sound on/off

       n      search forewards

       N      search backwards

       o      select next output sound device. The volume levels and the  "mute"  states  of  all
              cards ar shown and can be altered

       p      place a bookmark

       q      quit daisy-player. The playing-point will be saved as bookmark.

       s      stop playing

       U,+    increase playing speed

       v,1    decrease playback volume

       V,7    increase playback volume (beware of Clipping)

NOTES

       When  playing  an  Audio-CD  skip-left  and  skip-right  react a little late. The same for
       commands like 'U', 'D' and HOME.

THANKS TO

       Daniel Veillard <daniel@veillard.com>
              for the XML2 library.

       Robert Leslie <rob@mars.org>
              for the MPEG audio decoder (madplay).

       Chris Bagwell <cbagwell@users.sourceforge.net>

       Rob Sykes <aquegg@yahoo.co.uk>
              for the sox library.

       Kim Nilsson <kim.nilsson@no-substitute.com>

       Lennart Poettering
              for pulseaudio.

FILES

       ~/.daisy-player/
              This directory contains the bookmarks in XML-format. . Each file has  the  name  of
              the book and contains the name of the current item, the start-time of that item and
              the current level.

       ~/.daisy-player.xml
              This file, in XML-format, contains the name of the desired  pulseaudio  device  and
              the desired playing speed.

SEE ALSO

       cddbget(1), unar(1), eject(1), udisksctl(1), pulseaudio(1), usermod(8)

AUTHOR

       Jos Lemmens <jos@jlemmens.nl>

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C)2003-2019 Jos Lemmens <jos@jlemmens.nl>

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of
       the GNU General Public License as  published  by  the  Free  Software  Foundation;  either
       version  2, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope
       that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even  the  implied  warranty  of
       MERCHANTABILITY  or  FITNESS  FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License
       for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License  along
       with  this  program (see the file COPYING); if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
       Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA