APL Video (APL 1.8 to 1.9)


(This is not the most recent version of APL. Use the Other Versions option to see the documentation for the most recent version of APL)

The Video component displays a video player that can display a single video or a series a videos. The embedded video player doesn't have any controls. Instead, the Video component provides the events and commands necessary to build the controls for controlling the video player. For details about how to control the video player, see the PlayMedia and ControlMedia commands.

Skills that use the Video component must provide a way to pause the video content by voice and by the use of an on-screen button.

Properties

The Video component has the following properties in addition to the base component properties. See the meaning of the columns.

Property Type Default Styled Dynamic Description

audioTrack

One of: foreground, background, none

foreground

No

No

Audio track to play on.

autoplay

boolean

false

No

No

If true, automatically start playing the video.

onEnd

Array of commands

[ ]

No

No

Commands to run when the last video track is finished playing.

onPause

Array of commands

[ ]

No

No

Commands to run when the video switches from playing to paused.

onPlay

Array of commands

[ ]

No

No

Commands to run when the video switches from paused to playing.

onTimeUpdate

Array of command

[ ]

No

No

Commands to run when the playback position changes.

onTrackUpdate

Array of commands

[ ]

No

No

Commands to run when the current video track changes.

onTrackReady

Array of commands

[]

No

No

Commands to run when the current track state changes to ready.

onTrackFail

Array of commands

[]

No

No

Commands to run when an error occurs and video player can't play the media.

preserve

Array of string

[]

No

No

Properties to save when reinflating the document with the Reinflate command.

scale

One of: best-fill, best-fit

best-fit

No

No

How the video should scale to fill the space.

source, source

URL or source array

[ ]

No

Yes

Video source or sources.

When the Video is the source or target of an event, the following values are reported in event.source or event.target:

{
  // Video-specific values
  "type": "Video",
  "currentTime": Integer,               // Current playback position in the current track, expressed in milliseconds
  "duration": Integer,                  // Duration of of the current track in milliseconds.  Returns -1 if the track duration is unknown.
  "ended": Boolean,                     // True if the video is in the ended state
  "paused": Boolean,                    // True if the video is in a paused state
  "trackCount": Integer,                // Total number of video tracks
  "trackIndex": Integer,                // Index of the current track (0-based)
  "trackState": notReady | ready |      // State of the current track
                failed
  "url": URL,                           // The URL of the current track

  // General component values
  "bind": Map,           // Access to component data-binding context
  "checked": Boolean,    // Checked state
  "disabled": Boolean,   // Disabled state
  "focused": Boolean,    // Focused state
  "height": Number,      // Height of the component, in dp (includes the padding)
  "id": ID,              // ID of the component
  "opacity": Number,     // Opacity of the component [0-1]
  "pressed": Boolean,    // Pressed state
  "uid": UID,            // Runtime-generated unique ID of the component
  "width": Number        // Width of the component, in dp (includes the padding)
}

height and width

The height and width of the Video component default to 100dp when not specified.

audioTrack

The audioTrack property assigns the media content to foreground or background audio, or mutes it entirely (none). Foreground audio interleaves with speech commands and sound effects. Background audio plays behind speech commands and sound effects. Only one audio source may be foreground or background at a time.

Value Description
foreground Audio plays on the foreground track. Speaking with the Alexa voice causes this media to pause.
background Audio plays on the background music track. It stops any existing background audio. Speaking with the Alexa voice may cause this media to duck or pause briefly.
none Audio content is ignored and only the video content is played.

With audioTrack set to foreground, the PlayMedia command does not "finish" until the all media tracks have finished. Thus, a simple command sequence can run that interleaves media content and speech, as shown in this example.

"onPress": [
  {
    "type": "PlayMedia",
    "componentId": "myVideoPlayer",
    "source": URL,
    "audioTrack": "foreground"
  },
  {
    "type": "SpeakItem",
    "description": "This will run after the media finishes playing",
    "componentId": "myAnswerBox"
  }
]

When a PlayMedia command has audioTrack set to background or none, the audio "finishes" immediately, and does not wait for the media content to end. Background media does not respond to touching the screen. For example, in the following sequence the SendEvent command fires immediately and does not wait for the media to finish playing.

"onPress": [
  {
    "type": "PlayMedia",
    "componentId": "myVideoPlayer",
    "source": URL,
    "audioTrack": "background"
  },
  {
    "type": "SendEvent",
    "description": "This will run immediately",
    "arguments": ["Media has started, but hasn't stopped yet"]
  }
]

autoplay

When true, the video automatically starts playing as soon as the video loads. When false, you must use a command to explicitly start the video playback. For details about the commands to control video playback, see the PlayMedia and ControlMedia commands. The autoplay property defaults to false.

onEnd

The onEnd handler runs when the last video in the video sequence finishes repeating and finishes playing. The onEnd handler can run multiple times. For example, a video might play through to the end and stop, and then receive a seek command to rewind to an earlier point, and then receive a play command, and then play through to the end and stop.

The event generated has the following form:

"event": {
  "source": {
    "type": "Video",
    "handler": "End",
    ...                     // Component source properties
  },
  "trackIndex": Integer,    // Will be equal to trackCount  1.
  "trackCount": Integer,
  "trackState": String,
  "currentTime": Integer,   // Will be equal to or greater than duration
  "duration": Integer,
  "paused": true,
  "ended": true
}

Refer to Event source for a description of event.source properties.

onPause

The onPause handler runs when the video playback intentionally switches from playing to paused. This might occur because the video player reached the end of the last video, a command stopped the playback, or the user intentionally advanced to the next track and therefore interrupted the synchronous video playback. The onPause handler doesn't run if the video player has to pause playback to download video content or when playback can't continue due to an error and invokes onTrackFail handler.

The event generated has the following form:

"event": {
  "source": {
    "type": "Video",
    "handler": "Pause",
    ...                     // Component source properties
  },
  "trackIndex": Integer,
  "trackCount": Integer,
  "trackState": String,
  "currentTime": Integer,
  "duration": Integer,
  "paused": true,
  "ended": BOOLEAN
}

Refer to Event source for a description of event.source properties.

onPlay

The onPlay handler is invoked each time when the video playback switches from paused to playing. This may occur in a video with autoplay set to true, from a PlayMedia command, or from a play command.

The event generated has this form:

"event": {
  "source": {
    "type": "Video",
    "handler": "Play",
    ...                     // Component source properties
  },
  "trackIndex": Integer,
  "trackCount": Integer,
  "trackState": String,
  "currentTime": Integer,
  "duration": Integer,
  "paused": false,
  "ended": BOOLEAN
}

Refer to Event source for a description of event.source properties.

onTimeUpdate

The onTimeUpdate handler is invoked when the playback position of the current video changes. The handler is invoked on a "best effort" basis; there is no guaranteed frequency of invocation.

The event generated has the form:

"event": {
  "source": {
    "type": "Video",
    "handler": "TimeUpdate",
  ...                     // Component source properties
  },
  "trackIndex": Integer,
  "trackCount": Integer,
  "currentTime": Integer,
  "trackState": String,
  "duration": Integer,
  "paused": BOOLEAN,
  "seekable": BOOLEAN,
  "ended": BOOLEAN
}

Refer to Event source for a description of event.source properties.

The onTimeUpdate handler always runs in fast mode.

onTrackUpdate

The onTrackUpdate handler is invoked when the active video track changes. This can happen during normal video sequence playback as the player advances to the next video track or as a result of a command issued against the player.

The event generated has this form:

"event": {
  "source": {
    "type": "Video",
    "handler": "TrackUpdate",
    ...                     // Component source properties
  },
  "trackIndex": Integer,
  "trackCount": Integer,
  "trackState": String,
  "currentTime": Integer,
  "duration": Integer,
  "paused": BOOLEAN,
  "ended": BOOLEAN
}

Refer to Event source for a description of event.source properties.

onTrackReady

The onTrackReady handler runs for a track when trackState changes from notReady to ready. This happens before the playback starts for each track when trackState changes from notReady to ready.

The event generated in case of a successful load has the following form:

"event": {
  "source": {
    "type": "Video",
    "handler": "TrackReady",
    ...                     // Component source properties
  },
  "trackIndex": Integer,
  "trackState": 'ready',
}

Refer to Event source for a description of event.source properties.

The onTrackReady event handler runs in fast mode.

The handler runs in the following scenarios:

  • The first source is valid and the video player gets the related media information required to start the playback. This happens after the document inflates and before the playback starts.

    In this scenario, the handler generates an event with the following form:

      "event": {
        "source": {
          "type": "Video",
          "handler": "TrackReady",
            ...                     // Component source properties
        },
        "trackIndex": 0,
        "trackState": 'ready',
      }
    
    • If source is invalid or the media isn't supported, onTrackFail runs instead.
    • The APL runtime can cache the media, so it might not need to reload the media content to repeat a track. When the video player repeats a track that was previously cached, onTrackReady doesn't run. When the player advances to the cached track, trackState property for the onTrackUpdate event is ready.
  • The video player advances to the next track after onTrackUpdate if the trackState property on the onTrackUpdate event is notReady.

    For example, advancing to the second track runs onTrackUpdate, followed by onTrackReady. Assuming the second track has a duration of 5000 milliseconds, these handlers generate the following events:

      "event": {
        "source": {
          "type": "Video",
          "handler": "TrackUpdate",
          ...                     // Component source properties
        },
        "trackIndex": 1,
        "trackCount": N,
        "trackState": 'notReady',
        "currentTime": 0,
        "duration": 5000,
        "paused": false,
        "ended": false
      }
    
      "event": {
        "source": {
          "type": "Video",
          "handler": "TrackReady",
          ...                     // Component source properties
        },
        "trackIndex": 1,
        "trackState": 'ready',
      }
    

onTrackFail

The onTrackFail handler runs for a track if an error occurs when trying to start the playback or during the playback or moving to a track. Errors might occur if source URL isn't accessible or media content is unsupported or malformed.

The player doesn't advance to the next track in case of failure and remains at the state it was when onTrackFail runs.

The event generated has the following form:

"event": {
  "source": {
    "type": "Video",
    "handler": "TrackFail",
    ...                     // Component source properties
  },
  "trackIndex": Integer,
  "trackState": "failed",
  "currentTime": Integer,
  "errorCode": Number          // Platform defined numerical error
}

Refer to Event source for a description of event.source properties.

The onTrackFail event handler runs in fast mode.

The handler runs in the following scenarios:

  • The video player fails to load the first track for playback, or the media content for the first track is malformed or unsupported. Playback won't start and video player won't advance to next track automatically.

    In this scenario, onTrackFail generates the following event:

      "event": {
        "source": {
          "type": "Video",
          "handler": "TrackFail",
          ...                     // Component source properties
        },
        "trackIndex": 0,
        "trackState": 'failed',
        "currentTime": 0,
        "errorCode": Number
      }
    
  • The video player advances to a track that fails to load, or is malformed, or unsupported.

    In this scenario, onTrackFail runs after onTrackUpdate.

    For example, assume the video player advanced to a track with an invalid URL. The onTrackUpdate handler runs, followed by onTrackFail. The handlers generate the follwoing events:

    "event": {
      "source": {
        "type": "Video",
        "handler": "TrackUpdate",
        ...                     // Component source properties
      },
      "trackIndex": 1,
      "trackCount": N,
      "trackState": 'notReady',
      "currentTime": 0,
      "duration": 0,
      "paused": 0,
      "ended": 0
    }
    
    "event": {
      "source": {
        "type": "Video",
        "handler": "TrackFail",
        ...                     // Component source properties
      },
      "trackIndex": 1,
      "trackState": 'failed',
      "currentTime": 0,
      "errorCode": Number
    }
    
  • The video player advances to a new track, invokes onTrackUpdate followed by onTrackReady and begins to play the track. However, after the playback begins, an error occurs and playback can't continue. Playback stops at the time when onTrackFail runs and the video player won't advance to next track automatically.

    For example, assume the video player is playing the second track in the sequence, with a duration of 5000 milliseconds. An error occurs at 1500 milliseconds. The playback stops, and the onTrackFail handler runs and generates the following event:

      "event": {
        "source": {
          "type": "Video",
          "handler": "TrackFail",
          ...                     // Component source properties
        },
        "trackIndex": 1,
        "trackState": 'failed',
        "currentTime": 1500,
        "errorCode": Number
      }
    

preserve

An array of dynamic component properties and bound properties to save when reinflating the document with the Reinflate command.

A Video component has the following component-specific property names you can assign to the preserve array:

  • source – The array of tracks
  • playingState – The state of the player (playing or paused).

The source option saves the current list of sources from the old video player and restores them in the new video player. This includes the currently selected track and position within that track.

The playingState option saves whether or not the video is currently playing. If playingState is not preserved, then the autoplay property in the video component is used to decide if the video player should automatically start playing video.

scale

Scales the video within the container.

Name Description
best-fill Scale the video so that it fills the container with no letterboxing. The top/bottom or left/right sides of the video are hidden if the video has a different aspect ratio than the container.
best-fit Scale the video so that it fits within the container. Letterbox blocks are applied to the sides or top/bottom of the video if it has different aspect ratio than the container.

source

Specifies the video clip or sequence of video clips to play. The source property can be either a plain URL (string) or an array of source data.

When you provide multiple videos in an array, the player plays each video in turn. The source property of the Video component and the url property of each source follow the rules of "array-ification". For the url property, you can provide a plain string as a single URL, as well as an object with a url property.

Each line in the following example shows a valid way to set the source property.

"source": URL
"source": [ URL ]
"source": { "url": URL }
"source": [ { "url": URL } ]
"source": [ URL1, { "url": URL2 } ]

The most general way of specifying the media sources is to fully expand the definition:

"source": [
  {
    "description": "The first video clip to play",
    "offset": 150,   // Skip the first 150 milliseconds
    "url": URL1,
  },
  {
    "description": "The second video clip to play",
    "url": URL2,
    "repeatCount": -1    // Repeat forever
  },
  {
    "description": "This video clip will only be reached by a command",
    "url": URL3
  }
]

The following minimal definition is equivalent to the previous definition:

"source": [
  {
    "offset": 150,   // Skip the first 150 milliseconds
    "url": URL1,
  },
  {
    "url": URL2,
    "repeatCount": -1    // Repeat forever
  },
  URL3
]

When source is a data array, it has the following structure:

Property Type Default Description

description

String

""

Optional description of this source material

duration

Number

none

Duration of time to play. If zero or negative, plays the entire stream. Expressed in milliseconds.

url

URL

REQUIRED

Media source material

repeatCount

Integer

0

Number of times to loop the video.

entity (entities)

Array of Entities

[]

Entity data to set when reporting this media to Alexa

offset

Number

0

Offset to start playing at in the stream.

duration

Duration of time to play, in milliseconds. Leave not set to play the full video. When set to a duration shorter than the actual media clip, the video player stops after playing for the specified time. Setting duration to a time longer than the actual media clip doesn't add any extra playing time. If duration is zero or smaller, the video player plays the entire media clip.

url (urls)

The URL of the source of the media. Must be https URLs. Determine which formats are supported by checking the video property of the Viewport.

repeatCount

The number of times to repeat playing this media. Defaults to 0, which means to play once through and stop. If set to -1, the video will repeat forever.

offset

The offset from the start of the media where it should start playing, expressed in milliseconds. Defaults to 0, which means that play begins at the start of the media. A video with a positive repeatCount value will restart playing the media at the same offset each time.

Video State

The video player has an exposed state with the values shown in the following table.

Property Type Description

trackIndex

Integer

Current track in the source array. 0-based index

trackCount

Integer

Total number of tracks in the source array.

trackState

notReady | ready | failed

State of the current track

currentTime

Integer

Current playback position in the current track, expressed in milliseconds.

duration

Integer

Duration of the current track, in milliseconds. Returns -1 when the track duration is unknown.

paused

Boolean

True when the video is in a paused state.

ended

Boolean

True when all video tracks have ended playing

The video event handlers expose these states as separate properties in the event property.

The following example shows how to send a request to the skill with information about video playback when the video begins to play. The following onPlay handler runs the SendEvent command and includes the event properties in the arguments.

{
    "onPlay": {
        "type": "SendEvent",
        "arguments": [
            "Track index is ${event.trackIndex}",
            "Track count is ${event.trackCount}",
            "Track media state is ${event.trackState}",
            "Current playback position is ${event.currentTime} milliseconds",
            "Track duration is ${event.duration}",
            "Playback is ${event.paused ? 'paused' : 'running'}",
            "Playback is ${event.ended ? '' : 'not '}ended"
        ]
    }
}

The following example shows the UserEvent request the skill receives. The arguments property of the request includes the video playback data specified in the arguments property of the command.

{
    "request": {
        "type": "Alexa.Presentation.APL.UserEvent",
        "requestId": "amzn1.echo-api.request.1",
        "timestamp": "2021-09-16T23:29:52Z",
        "locale": "en-US",
        "arguments": [
            "Track index is 0",
            "Track count is 3",
            "Track media state is ready",
            "Current playback position is 0 milliseconds",
            "Track duration is 32439",
            "Playback is running",
            "Playback is not ended"
        ],
        "components": {},
        "source": {
            "type": "Video",
            "handler": "Play",
            "id": "videoPlayerId"
        },
        "token": "videoHandlersExampleToken"
    }
}

trackState

Returns a value that describes the state of the current track or media source.

State Description

notReady

Initial or default state for a track. Playback can't start at this state.

ready

Track is ready and playback can start.

failed

Track has failed and playback can't start or continue at current playback position.

Sample video

{
  "type": "Video",
  "source": URL,
  "autoplay": true
}

Playback intents

You must implement built-in intents to support voice-based playback control.

Manage voice input after playing a video

To accept voice input after a video ends, use the onEnd event handler to invoke a SendEvent command. Your skill then handles the subsequent UserEvent request. Send a response with shouldEndSession set to false to accept voice input. Your response should include appropriate outputSpeech and reprompt objects to ask your Alexa customer for input.

Devices that don't support video

Some devices with screens do not support video playback. On a device that does not support video, the Video component remains on the screen, but displays no content so users will see a blank area on the screen. Provide an alternative experience for devices that don't support video.

The disallowVideo property in the data-binding context returns true when the device does not support video. Use this property in the conditional logic in your APL document.

Alternatively, you can check for video support in your skill code. Check the context.Viewport.video property in the request sent to your skill.


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Last updated: Jun 18, 2024