Leadtools.Multimedia Namespace > AudioInputs Class > Item Property : Item(Int32) Property |
public AudioInput Item( int index ) {get;}
'Declaration Public Overloads ReadOnly Property Item( _ ByVal index As Integer _ ) As AudioInput
'Usage Dim instance As AudioInputs Dim index As Integer Dim value As AudioInput value = instance.Item(index)
public AudioInput Item( int index ) {get;}
get_Item(Int32)();
public: property AudioInput^ Item { AudioInput^ get(int index); }
Exception | Description |
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System.ArgumentOutOfRangeException | The exception that is thrown when the value of an argument is outside the allowable range of values as defined by the invoked method. |
myCollection[index]
. The C# language uses the this keyword to define the indexers instead of implementing the Item property. Visual Basic implements Item as a default property, which provides the same indexing functionality.Public _result As Boolean = False Public _form As CaptureCtrlForm = New CaptureCtrlForm() Public Sub IndexContainsExample() Try ' reference the form capture control Dim capturectrl As CaptureCtrl = _form.CaptureCtrl ' set an audio device first, you should use your audio device name here If capturectrl.AudioDevices("USB") Is Nothing Then Throw New Exception("No USB audio device available") End If capturectrl.AudioDevices("USB").Selected = True ' reference the form capture control's audio inputs Dim inputs As AudioInputs = capturectrl.AudioInputs ' check for the master volume input Dim i As Integer = inputs.IndexOf("Master Volume") ' access the input via the collection indexer Dim ai As AudioInput = inputs(i) ' check if the collection contains this input ' (it should we just got it with IndexOf above!) If inputs.Contains(ai) Then ' set the result to what we expect _result = True End If Catch e1 As Exception _result = False End Try End Sub
public bool _result = false; public CaptureCtrlForm _form = new CaptureCtrlForm(); public void IndexContainsExample() { try { // reference the form capture control CaptureCtrl capturectrl = _form.CaptureCtrl; // set an audio device first. use your audio device's name here if (capturectrl.AudioDevices["USB"] == null) throw new Exception("No USB audio device available"); capturectrl.AudioDevices["USB"].Selected = true; // reference the form capture control's audio inputs AudioInputs inputs = capturectrl.AudioInputs; // check for the master volume input int i = inputs.IndexOf("Master Volume"); // access the input via the collection indexer AudioInput ai = inputs[i]; // check whether the collection contains this input // (it should we just got it with IndexOf above!) if (inputs.Contains(ai)) { // set the result to what we expect _result = true; } } catch (Exception) { _result = false; } }
Target Platforms: Windows 7, Windows Vista SP1 or later, Windows XP SP3, Windows Server 2008 (Server Core not supported), Windows Server 2008 R2 (Server Core supported with SP1 or later), Windows Server 2003 SP2