AudioParam: value property
The Web Audio API's AudioParam
interface property value
gets or sets the value of this AudioParam
at the current time. Initially, the value is set to AudioParam.defaultValue
.
Setting value
has the same effect as calling AudioParam.setValueAtTime
with the time returned by the AudioContext
's currentTime
property.
Value
A floating-point Number
indicating the parameter's value as of the current time. This value will be between the values specified by the minValue
and maxValue
properties.
Usage notes
Value precision and variation
The data type used internally to store value
is a single-precision (32-bit) floating point number, while JavaScript uses 64-bit double-precision floating point numbers. As a result, the value you read from the value
property may not always exactly equal what you set it to.
Consider this example:
const source = new AudioBufferSourceNode();
const rate = 5.3;
source.playbackRate.value = rate;
console.log(source.playbackRate.value === rate);
The log output will be false
, because the playback rate parameter, rate
, was converted to the 32-bit floating-point number closest to 5.3, which yields 5.300000190734863. One solution is to use the Math.fround()
method, which returns the single-precision value equivalent to the 64-bit JavaScript value specified—when setting value
, like this:
const source = new AudioBufferSourceNode();
const rate = Math.fround(5.3);
source.playbackRate.value = rate;
console.log(source.playbackRate.value === rate);
In this case, the log output will be true
.
Value of a property which is changing over time
The value
of an AudioParam
can either be fixed or can vary over time. This is reflected by the value
getter, which returns the value of the parameter as of the audio rendering engine's most recent render quantum, or moment at which audio buffers are processed and updated. In addition to processing audio buffers, each render quantum updates the value
of each AudioParam
as needed given the current time and any established time-based parameter value changes.
Upon first creating the parameter, its value is set to its default value, given by AudioParam.defaultValue
. This is the parameter's value at a time of 0.0 seconds, and will remain the parameter's value until the first render quantum in which the value is altered.
During each render quantum, the browser does the following things related to managing the value of a parameter:
- If the
value
setter has been used, the parameter's value is changed to the value given. - If the current time equals or exceeds the time specified by a previous call to
setValueAtTime()
, the value
is changed to the value passed into setValueAtTime()
. - If any graduated or ramped value changing methods have been called and the current time is within the time range over which the graduated change should occur, the value is updated based on the appropriate algorithm. These ramped or graduated value-changing methods include
linearRampToValueAtTime()
, setTargetAtTime()
, and setValueCurveAtTime()
.
Thus, the value
of a parameter is maintained to accurately reflect the state of the parameter over time.
Examples
This example instantly changes the volume of a GainNode
to 40%.
const audioCtx = new AudioContext();
const gainNode = audioCtx.createGain();
gainNode.gain.value = 0.4;
gainNode.gain.setValueAtTime(0.4, audioCtx.currentTime);
Specifications
Browser compatibility
|
Desktop |
Mobile |
|
Chrome |
Edge |
Firefox |
Internet Explorer |
Opera |
Safari |
WebView Android |
Chrome Android |
Firefox for Android |
Opera Android |
Safari on IOS |
Samsung Internet |
value |
14 |
12 |
25Before Firefox 69, value did not take into account scheduled or gradiated changes to the parameter's value; instead, only explicitly set values were returned. |
No |
15 |
6 |
≤37 |
18 |
25Firefox for Android does not currently take into account scheduled or gradiated changes to the parameter's value; only the initial value or the most recent explicitly set value is returned. |
14 |
6 |
1.0 |
When changing the gain value of a GainNode
, Google Chrome prior to version 64 (January 2018) would perform a smooth interpolation to prevent dezippering. Starting with version 64, the value is changed instantly to bring it in line with the Web Audio spec. See Chrome Platform Status for details.
See also