The problem is that I have several slides where each layer has different pieces of audio. For example, there is a slide which has a voice attached to the base layer. On interacting with a button, this voice is stopped and we jump to another layer where there is another voice which starts playing. What now happens is that when the user uses the seekbar to jump to the beginning of the slide (without using the reload button) you can hear overlapping noises. An edge case, but I would like to eliminate it. Hence, the need for disabling seeking (on these slides).
It looks like Harri and Jill are helping you out here, but if you're able to share your .story file here with us it may help clarify how you'd like to set it up and come up with some ideas for you.
In the meantime, here are some other threads/thoughts for you:
If you change the settings on your layers (little cog icon) to 'allow seeking' this should resolve the issue. This will mean that a new seekbar appears on the layer and the user can only move that back and forth. If they then close the layer they will have access to the original timeline and the audio.
If I enable seeking on a layer, and I press the "reload" button while on that layer, only that layer reloads. The whole slide does not start again from the beginning. Any way to fix this?
Maybe I misunderstood the use of the layer. I thought the layer existed as a lightbox to display additional information and that the user would be able to close the lightbox. If that is the case then the learner would expect reload to only reload that layer content.
If this is not the case, could you explain how the content on the layer is meant to be displayed - maybe you don't need a layer at all, just some audio triggers on the base layer.
The layer and the lightbox offer two different types of functionality. The layer exists within a particular slide, and is used to display additional content within that slide, whereas the lightbox is actually a separate slide that you can display on top of a slide.
Using the seeking on the slide layer will control that layer itself, and will function as described here:
Allow seeking: If your slide's player controls include a seekbar, you can set this selector to Yes if you want to make the seekbar active on your slide layer. This is handy if the layer contains video, animations, or audio that you want learners to be able to pause, rewind, or fast-forward. If you leave the option set to Automatically Decide, Storyline will allow seeking on the layer if you've marked any of the following options: Hide objects on base layer, Prevent the user from clicking on the base layer, or Pause timeline of base layer.
My apologies for any confusion caused - when I referred the the layer as a lightbox I meant that is was a layer to open up additional content on top of the base layer content and could be closed by the learner, rather than the 'Lightbox' feature in SL.
14 Replies
Hi Rahul,
To my knowledge this is not possible. However there may be a workaround for it.
What are you hoping to achieve by removing the ability to interact with the seekbar? Are you trying to prevent people from skipping ahead?
Hi Harri,
The problem is that I have several slides where each layer has different pieces of audio. For example, there is a slide which has a voice attached to the base layer. On interacting with a button, this voice is stopped and we jump to another layer where there is another voice which starts playing. What now happens is that when the user uses the seekbar to jump to the beginning of the slide (without using the reload button) you can hear overlapping noises. An edge case, but I would like to eliminate it. Hence, the need for disabling seeking (on these slides).
Ok I think I understand the issue now. And i'm fairly confident that we can find a solution (somehow)
Have you allowed seeking for the layers themselves or just the base layer?
And would you be able to share the slide on here so I can take a look at how its set up?
Here's a thread that might be useful. I had to convert audio to video files to make it work, and it was time consuming. But it worked.
http://community.articulate.com/forums/p/20937/193857.aspx#193857
Hi Rahul,
It looks like Harri and Jill are helping you out here, but if you're able to share your .story file here with us it may help clarify how you'd like to set it up and come up with some ideas for you.
In the meantime, here are some other threads/thoughts for you:
Disable seeking within slide properties
Thread on stopping audio as you move through layers
Hi folks,
Apologies for the delayed response. Here is an extract from my story with two slides where this problem (layered audio while seeking) occurs.
Thanks
Rahul
Hi Rahul,
If you change the settings on your layers (little cog icon) to 'allow seeking' this should resolve the issue. This will mean that a new seekbar appears on the layer and the user can only move that back and forth. If they then close the layer they will have access to the original timeline and the audio.
Hope this helps
Thanks Harri for helping Rahul out here.
Thanks a lot Harri! This works.
Problem:
If I enable seeking on a layer, and I press the "reload" button while on that layer, only that layer reloads. The whole slide does not start again from the beginning. Any way to fix this?
Hi Rahul,
Maybe I misunderstood the use of the layer. I thought the layer existed as a lightbox to display additional information and that the user would be able to close the lightbox. If that is the case then the learner would expect reload to only reload that layer content.
If this is not the case, could you explain how the content on the layer is meant to be displayed - maybe you don't need a layer at all, just some audio triggers on the base layer.
The layer and the lightbox offer two different types of functionality. The layer exists within a particular slide, and is used to display additional content within that slide, whereas the lightbox is actually a separate slide that you can display on top of a slide.
Using the seeking on the slide layer will control that layer itself, and will function as described here:
My apologies for any confusion caused - when I referred the the layer as a lightbox I meant that is was a layer to open up additional content on top of the base layer content and could be closed by the learner, rather than the 'Lightbox' feature in SL.
No worries Harri - just wanted to make sure we were all using the same terms. It's easy to get confused with these!
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