IMediaSeeking::SetPositions

A version of this page is also available for

Windows Embedded CE 6.0 R3

4/8/2010

This method sets current and stop positions and applies flags to both.

Syntax

HRESULT SetPositions(
  LONGLONG* pCurrent,
  DWORD dwCurrentFlags,
  LONGLONG* pStop,
  DWORD dwStopFlags
);

Parameters

  • pCurrent
    [in, out] Start position if stopped, or position from which to continue if paused.
  • dwCurrentFlags
    [in] When seeking, one of these flags must be set to indicate the type of seek. The flags passed to this method should include one positioning value and (optionally) any of the nonpositioning values.

    Value Description

    AM_SEEKING_NoPositioning

    No change in positioning.

    AM_SEEKING_AbsolutePositioning

    Position supplied is absolute.

    AM_SEEKING_RelativePositioning

    Position supplied is relative to the current position.

    AM_SEEKING_IncrementalPositioning

    Stop position relative to current; useful for seeking when paused (only valid in conjunction with stop times).

    AM_SEEKING_PositioningBitsMask

    Mask flag; determine if seeking is required by performing a bitwise AND of the four flags listed above and this mask.

    If the resulting value is nonzero, some form of seeking is required.

    Check the value of the last two bits to determine which of the above flags are set.

    AM_SEEKING_SeekToKeyFrame

    Seek to the nearest key frame (not as accurate but quicker).

    AM_SEEKING_ReturnTime

    Return the media time equivalents for pCurrent and pStop (overwriting these values with the returned values).

    AM_SEEKING_Segment

    At the end of the segment call EC_ENDOFSEGMENT instead of EndOfStream.

    AM_SEEKING_NoFlush

    Do not flush.

  • pStop
    [in, out] Position in the stream at which to quit.
  • dwStopFlags
    [in] Stop position seeking options to be applied. These are the same as listed for dwCurrentFlags.

Return Value

Returns an HRESULT value that depends on the implementation of the interface.

The default DirectShow implementation returns E_POINTER if the pointer argument is NULL, NOERROR for success, E_INVALIDARG if a parameter is out of range, or another COM return code otherwise.

Remarks

The following code fragment checks for the type of seeking required.

switch ( dwFlags & AM_SEEKING_PositioningBitsMask )
{
  case AM_SEEKING_IncrementalPositioning:
    // Check this is on a stop time
    // Get Current, add this delta, apply result as new stop time
    break;
  case AM_SEEKING_RelativePositioning:
    // ...
    break;
  case AM_SEEKING_AbsolutePositioning:
    // ...
    break;
  case AM_SEEKING_NoPositioning:
    // Nothing to do.
    break;
}

Requirements

Windows Embedded CE Windows CE 2.12 and later
Windows Mobile Pocket PC for Windows Mobile Version 5.0 and later, Smartphone for Windows Mobile Version 5.0 and later
Note Microsoft DirectShow applications and DirectShow filters have different include file and Library requirements
For more information, see Setting Up the Build Environment, Version 2.12 requires DXPAK 1.0 or later

See Also

Reference

IMediaSeeking Interface