
At Wed, 08 Feb 2012 14:35:29 +0100, David Henningsson wrote:
On 02/08/2012 12:46 PM, Mark Brown wrote:
On Wed, Feb 08, 2012 at 09:36:21AM +0100, David Henningsson wrote:
On 02/07/2012 08:48 PM, Mark Brown wrote:
I'd like these to match the names currently used in HDA, like this:
{ SW_MICROPHONE_INSERT, "Mic" },
It seems odd to abbreviate this and nothing else but I'm not that fussed either way.
{ SW_LINEOUT_INSERT, "Line-Out" }, { SW_VIDEOOUT_INSERT, "Video-Out" },
For these it's really not normal English to hyphenate them, it looks strange to do so.
I guess it could be easier to parse if we avoid spaces in names,
Exactly, it was the reason.
but right now there is no such parser AFAIK anyway, so it does not matter much. Video-Out is not present in HDA; I did that change to make it consistent with "Line-Out".
{ SW_LINEIN_INSERT, "Line" },
It seems odd and a bit undescriptive to not specify the description here when it is specified for the outputs?
Historically, "Line" represents an line input in ALSA control names. But it wouldn't be bad to an explicit directional notation, too.
Actually, it matters less if we settle on the standard you set above, or what the HDA currently does, as long as the names are the same.
Except for Mic where I don't mind either way I'd rather bring the HDA names into (but note that the idea is to remove the HDA specific jack controls - I think these names are used in other places though?).
I'll let Takashi have the final say about the names. But note that for HDA these names will not be enough, e g, we might have one "Front Mic" and one "Rear Mic" and need to know which one is which.
What I have in my mind is a form like "[location] base [channel]". The location prefix (e.g. Front, Rear) is optional, and also the channel suffix, too.
I have no strong opinion Whether to allow a space in the base name. In my patch, I chose hyphens just to make parsing easier.
OTOH, we can take an optional directional suffix, i.e. "[location] base [direction] [channel]", too. For example, base can be "Video" or "Line", and direction can be "Out" or "In".
I'd like to hear rather comments from others.
thanks,
Takashi