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: /usr/lib64/python3.6/ [ drwxr-xr-x ]

name : sndhdr.py
"""Routines to help recognizing sound files.

Function whathdr() recognizes various types of sound file headers.
It understands almost all headers that SOX can decode.

The return tuple contains the following items, in this order:
- file type (as SOX understands it)
- sampling rate (0 if unknown or hard to decode)
- number of channels (0 if unknown or hard to decode)
- number of frames in the file (-1 if unknown or hard to decode)
- number of bits/sample, or 'U' for U-LAW, or 'A' for A-LAW

If the file doesn't have a recognizable type, it returns None.
If the file can't be opened, OSError is raised.

To compute the total time, divide the number of frames by the
sampling rate (a frame contains a sample for each channel).

Function what() calls whathdr().  (It used to also use some
heuristics for raw data, but this doesn't work very well.)

Finally, the function test() is a simple main program that calls
what() for all files mentioned on the argument list.  For directory
arguments it calls what() for all files in that directory.  Default
argument is "." (testing all files in the current directory).  The
option -r tells it to recurse down directories found inside
explicitly given directories.
"""

# The file structure is top-down except that the test program and its
# subroutine come last.

__all__ = ['what', 'whathdr']

from collections import namedtuple

SndHeaders = namedtuple('SndHeaders',
                        'filetype framerate nchannels nframes sampwidth')

SndHeaders.filetype.__doc__ = ("""The value for type indicates the data type
and will be one of the strings 'aifc', 'aiff', 'au','hcom',
'sndr', 'sndt', 'voc', 'wav', '8svx', 'sb', 'ub', or 'ul'.""")
SndHeaders.framerate.__doc__ = ("""The sampling_rate will be either the actual
value or 0 if unknown or difficult to decode.""")
SndHeaders.nchannels.__doc__ = ("""The number of channels or 0 if it cannot be
determined or if the value is difficult to decode.""")
SndHeaders.nframes.__doc__ = ("""The value for frames will be either the number
of frames or -1.""")
SndHeaders.sampwidth.__doc__ = ("""Either the sample size in bits or
'A' for A-LAW or 'U' for u-LAW.""")

def what(filename):
    """Guess the type of a sound file."""
    res = whathdr(filename)
    return res


def whathdr(filename):
    """Recognize sound headers."""
    with open(filename, 'rb') as f:
        h = f.read(512)
        for tf in tests:
            res = tf(h, f)
            if res:
                return SndHeaders(*res)
        return None


#-----------------------------------#
# Subroutines per sound header type #
#-----------------------------------#

tests = []

def test_aifc(h, f):
    import aifc
    if not h.startswith(b'FORM'):
        return None
    if h[8:12] == b'AIFC':
        fmt = 'aifc'
    elif h[8:12] == b'AIFF':
        fmt = 'aiff'
    else:
        return None
    f.seek(0)
    try:
        a = aifc.open(f, 'r')
    except (EOFError, aifc.Error):
        return None
    return (fmt, a.getframerate(), a.getnchannels(),
            a.getnframes(), 8 * a.getsampwidth())

tests.append(test_aifc)


def test_au(h, f):
    if h.startswith(b'.snd'):
        func = get_long_be
    elif h[:4] in (b'\0ds.', b'dns.'):
        func = get_long_le
    else:
        return None
    filetype = 'au'
    hdr_size = func(h[4:8])
    data_size = func(h[8:12])
    encoding = func(h[12:16])
    rate = func(h[16:20])
    nchannels = func(h[20:24])
    sample_size = 1 # default
    if encoding == 1:
        sample_bits = 'U'
    elif encoding == 2:
        sample_bits = 8
    elif encoding == 3:
        sample_bits = 16
        sample_size = 2
    else:
        sample_bits = '?'
    frame_size = sample_size * nchannels
    if frame_size:
        nframe = data_size / frame_size
    else:
        nframe = -1
    return filetype, rate, nchannels, nframe, sample_bits

tests.append(test_au)


def test_hcom(h, f):
    if h[65:69] != b'FSSD' or h[128:132] != b'HCOM':
        return None
    divisor = get_long_be(h[144:148])
    if divisor:
        rate = 22050 / divisor
    else:
        rate = 0
    return 'hcom', rate, 1, -1, 8

tests.append(test_hcom)


def test_voc(h, f):
    if not h.startswith(b'Creative Voice File\032'):
        return None
    sbseek = get_short_le(h[20:22])
    rate = 0
    if 0 <= sbseek < 500 and h[sbseek] == 1:
        ratecode = 256 - h[sbseek+4]
        if ratecode:
            rate = int(1000000.0 / ratecode)
    return 'voc', rate, 1, -1, 8

tests.append(test_voc)


def test_wav(h, f):
    import wave
    # 'RIFF' <len> 'WAVE' 'fmt ' <len>
    if not h.startswith(b'RIFF') or h[8:12] != b'WAVE' or h[12:16] != b'fmt ':
        return None
    f.seek(0)
    try:
        w = wave.openfp(f, 'r')
    except (EOFError, wave.Error):
        return None
    return ('wav', w.getframerate(), w.getnchannels(),
                   w.getnframes(), 8*w.getsampwidth())

tests.append(test_wav)


def test_8svx(h, f):
    if not h.startswith(b'FORM') or h[8:12] != b'8SVX':
        return None
    # Should decode it to get #channels -- assume always 1
    return '8svx', 0, 1, 0, 8

tests.append(test_8svx)


def test_sndt(h, f):
    if h.startswith(b'SOUND'):
        nsamples = get_long_le(h[8:12])
        rate = get_short_le(h[20:22])
        return 'sndt', rate, 1, nsamples, 8

tests.append(test_sndt)


def test_sndr(h, f):
    if h.startswith(b'\0\0'):
        rate = get_short_le(h[2:4])
        if 4000 <= rate <= 25000:
            return 'sndr', rate, 1, -1, 8

tests.append(test_sndr)


#-------------------------------------------#
# Subroutines to extract numbers from bytes #
#-------------------------------------------#

def get_long_be(b):
    return (b[0] << 24) | (b[1] << 16) | (b[2] << 8) | b[3]

def get_long_le(b):
    return (b[3] << 24) | (b[2] << 16) | (b[1] << 8) | b[0]

def get_short_be(b):
    return (b[0] << 8) | b[1]

def get_short_le(b):
    return (b[1] << 8) | b[0]


#--------------------#
# Small test program #
#--------------------#

def test():
    import sys
    recursive = 0
    if sys.argv[1:] and sys.argv[1] == '-r':
        del sys.argv[1:2]
        recursive = 1
    try:
        if sys.argv[1:]:
            testall(sys.argv[1:], recursive, 1)
        else:
            testall(['.'], recursive, 1)
    except KeyboardInterrupt:
        sys.stderr.write('\n[Interrupted]\n')
        sys.exit(1)

def testall(list, recursive, toplevel):
    import sys
    import os
    for filename in list:
        if os.path.isdir(filename):
            print(filename + '/:', end=' ')
            if recursive or toplevel:
                print('recursing down:')
                import glob
                names = glob.glob(os.path.join(filename, '*'))
                testall(names, recursive, 0)
            else:
                print('*** directory (use -r) ***')
        else:
            print(filename + ':', end=' ')
            sys.stdout.flush()
            try:
                print(what(filename))
            except OSError:
                print('*** not found ***')

if __name__ == '__main__':
    test()

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Web Design for Beginners | Anyleson - Learning Platform
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Web Design for Beginners

Web Design for Beginners

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Created by Linda Anderson
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5 Users are following this upcoming course
Course Published
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Course
Web Design for Beginners
in Design
4.25
1:45 Hours
8 Jul 2021
₹11.80

What you will learn?

Create any website layout you can imagine

Support any device size with Responsive (mobile-friendly) Design

Add tasteful animations and effects with CSS3

Course description

You can launch a new career in web development today by learning HTML & CSS. You don't need a computer science degree or expensive software. All you need is a computer, a bit of time, a lot of determination, and a teacher you trust. I've taught HTML and CSS to countless coworkers and held training sessions for fortune 100 companies. I am that teacher you can trust. 


Don't limit yourself by creating websites with some cheesy “site-builder" tool. This course teaches you how to take 100% control over your webpages by using the same concepts that every professional website is created with.


This course does not assume any prior experience. We start at square one and learn together bit by bit. By the end of the course you will have created (by hand) a website that looks great on phones, tablets, laptops, and desktops alike.


In the summer of 2020 the course has received a new section where we push our website live up onto the web using the free GitHub Pages service; this means you'll be able to share a link to what you've created with your friends, family, colleagues and the world!

Requirements

No prerequisite knowledge required

No special software required

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