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public interface TempoControl
TempoControl controls the tempo, in musical terms, of a song.
TempoControl is typically implemented in Players for MIDI media, i.e. playback of a Standard MIDI File (SMF).
 TempControl is basic functionality for a MIDI playback application. This
 is in contrast to MIDIControl, which targets advanced
 applications. Moreover, TempoControl needs a sequence - e.g. a MIDI file -
 to operate. MIDIControl does not require a sequence.
 
Musical tempo is usually specified in beats per minute. To provide a means to access tempos with fractional beats per minute, the methods to set and get the tempo work on "milli-beat" per minute. A simle division by 1000 is sufficient to get the actual beats per minute.
As a MIDI file can contain any number of tempo changes during playback, the absolute tempo is a state of the sequencer. During playback of a MIDI file, setting the tempo in response to a user interaction will not always yield the desired result: the user's tempo can be overriden by the playing MIDI file to another tempo just momens later.
 In order to overcome this problem, a relative tempo rate is used (in
 Java Sound terms: tempo factor). This rate is applied to all tempo
 settings. The tempo rate is specified in "milli-percent", i.e. a value of
 100'000 means playback at original tempo. The tempo rate is set with the
 setRate method of the super class, RateControl.
 
The concept of tempo rate allows one to play back a MIDI sequence at a different tempo without losing the relative tempo changes in it.
 The setTempo() and getTempo() methods do
 not affect or reflect the playback rate. This means that
 changing the rate will not result in a change of hte value returned by
 getTempo(). Similarly, setting the tempo with
 setTempo() does not change the rate, i.e. the return value of
 getRate() is not changed. The effective playback tempo is
 always the product of tempo and rate:
 
    effectiveBeatsPerMinute = getTempo() getRate() / 1000 / 100000
 
Player, 
RateControl, 
PitchControl, 
MIDIControl| Method Summary | ||
|---|---|---|
|  int | getTempo()Gets the current playback tempo. | |
|  int | setTempo(int millitempo)Sets the current playback tempo. | |
| Methods inherited from interface javax.microedition.media.control.RateControl | 
|---|
| getMaxRate, getMinRate, getRate, setRate | 
| Method Detail | 
|---|
int setTempo(int millitempo)
setTempo() does not prevent the tempo from being changed
 subsequently by tempo events in the MIDI sequence. Example: during
 playback of a sequence, the user changes the tempo. But just moments
 later, the MIDI sequence changes the tempo to another value, so
 effectively the user interaction is ignored. To overcome this, and to
 allow consistent user interaction, use 
 setRate inherited from
 RateControl.
  The setTempo() method reutrns the actual tempo set by
 the Player's implementation. It sets the tempo as close to
 the requested value as possible, but is not required to set it to the
 excat value. Specifically, implementations may have a lower or upper
 limit, which will be used as tempo if the requested tempo is out of
 limits. 0 or negative tempo does not exist and will always result in the
 lower tempo limit of the implementation. Implementations are guaranteed
 to support 10'000 to 300'000 milli-beats per minute.
 
Setting tempo to a stopped sequence will force the sequence to start with that tempo, even if the sequence has a tempo event at the start position. Any subsequent tempo events in the sequence will be considered, though. Rewinding back to a position with a tempo event will result in a tempo change causeed by the tempo event, too. Example: a sequence with initial tempo of 120bpm has not been started yet. The user sets the tempo to 140bpm and starts playback. When the playback position is reset to the beginning, the tempo will be set to 120bpm due to the tempo event at the beginning of the sequence.
 Playback rate (see setRate) and tempo
 are independent factors of the effective tempo. Modifying tempo with
 setTempo does not affect the playback rate and vice
 versa. The effective tempo is the product of tempo and rate.
millitempo - The tempo specified in milli-beats per minute (must be
 > 0, e.g. 120'000 for 120 beats per minute).
TempoControl.getTempo()int getTempo()
Player
  is prefetched. An unitialized sequencer in this case returns a default
  tempo of 120 beats per minute.
  setTempo() changes current tempo until a
  tempo event in the MIDI file is encountered.
 
TempoControl.setTempo(int)| 
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