Change the audio device which the keyboard volume keys control












3















I have Voicemeeter Banana running normally, this means that it is my default audio device in exclusive mode so most of my sound is routed through it. This gives me great control over the audio devices in my system, virtual or hardware.



I use the volume keys on my keyboard often. When I'm using Voicemeeter, the volume keys adjust the "Voicemeeter input" which does not change the levels through my headset at all. So to change the levels in my usb headset, I have to either go into the windows volume mixer, and adjust the master for the device there, or adjust it in voicemeeter. I prefer to use the windows adjustment, it goes from 0-100 in increments of 2, while voicemeeter goes from -60dB to +12dB. Plus windows has a small popup that shows the volume level, voicemeeter does not. My max volume is set to the level of my usb headset, meaning I have to turn my headset up to max, and control to taste from voicemeeter. This is dangerous when I'm not paying attention to voicemeeter, and accidentally play something at full volume (painful, not fun).



Voicemeeter allows me to hook the volume keys to the output assigned to my usb headset, but then I run into the problem of having to adjust voicemeeter.



I want to be able to change what audio device my keyboard volume keys control.



Now I know this is somewhat possible as my usb headset (no special drivers) has volume buttons that adjust the levels of the usb headset at a driver level, not my default device which is "Voicemeeter input" While my Keyboard keys adjust the level of "Voicemeeter input"



What commands are being sent by my keyboard and my headset? Is there a way to find out? Neither are using special drivers. Can I change those commands? Or at least change how my system reacts to them?



The ideal situation would be the ability to set the volume keys to change the levels of "USB audio device" while ignoring the default device, "VoiceMeeter Input"



I found Microsoft's documentation on volume control but I can't make heads or tails of it. Perhaps the answer is in here, if I knew what to look for.










share|improve this question



























    3















    I have Voicemeeter Banana running normally, this means that it is my default audio device in exclusive mode so most of my sound is routed through it. This gives me great control over the audio devices in my system, virtual or hardware.



    I use the volume keys on my keyboard often. When I'm using Voicemeeter, the volume keys adjust the "Voicemeeter input" which does not change the levels through my headset at all. So to change the levels in my usb headset, I have to either go into the windows volume mixer, and adjust the master for the device there, or adjust it in voicemeeter. I prefer to use the windows adjustment, it goes from 0-100 in increments of 2, while voicemeeter goes from -60dB to +12dB. Plus windows has a small popup that shows the volume level, voicemeeter does not. My max volume is set to the level of my usb headset, meaning I have to turn my headset up to max, and control to taste from voicemeeter. This is dangerous when I'm not paying attention to voicemeeter, and accidentally play something at full volume (painful, not fun).



    Voicemeeter allows me to hook the volume keys to the output assigned to my usb headset, but then I run into the problem of having to adjust voicemeeter.



    I want to be able to change what audio device my keyboard volume keys control.



    Now I know this is somewhat possible as my usb headset (no special drivers) has volume buttons that adjust the levels of the usb headset at a driver level, not my default device which is "Voicemeeter input" While my Keyboard keys adjust the level of "Voicemeeter input"



    What commands are being sent by my keyboard and my headset? Is there a way to find out? Neither are using special drivers. Can I change those commands? Or at least change how my system reacts to them?



    The ideal situation would be the ability to set the volume keys to change the levels of "USB audio device" while ignoring the default device, "VoiceMeeter Input"



    I found Microsoft's documentation on volume control but I can't make heads or tails of it. Perhaps the answer is in here, if I knew what to look for.










    share|improve this question

























      3












      3








      3








      I have Voicemeeter Banana running normally, this means that it is my default audio device in exclusive mode so most of my sound is routed through it. This gives me great control over the audio devices in my system, virtual or hardware.



      I use the volume keys on my keyboard often. When I'm using Voicemeeter, the volume keys adjust the "Voicemeeter input" which does not change the levels through my headset at all. So to change the levels in my usb headset, I have to either go into the windows volume mixer, and adjust the master for the device there, or adjust it in voicemeeter. I prefer to use the windows adjustment, it goes from 0-100 in increments of 2, while voicemeeter goes from -60dB to +12dB. Plus windows has a small popup that shows the volume level, voicemeeter does not. My max volume is set to the level of my usb headset, meaning I have to turn my headset up to max, and control to taste from voicemeeter. This is dangerous when I'm not paying attention to voicemeeter, and accidentally play something at full volume (painful, not fun).



      Voicemeeter allows me to hook the volume keys to the output assigned to my usb headset, but then I run into the problem of having to adjust voicemeeter.



      I want to be able to change what audio device my keyboard volume keys control.



      Now I know this is somewhat possible as my usb headset (no special drivers) has volume buttons that adjust the levels of the usb headset at a driver level, not my default device which is "Voicemeeter input" While my Keyboard keys adjust the level of "Voicemeeter input"



      What commands are being sent by my keyboard and my headset? Is there a way to find out? Neither are using special drivers. Can I change those commands? Or at least change how my system reacts to them?



      The ideal situation would be the ability to set the volume keys to change the levels of "USB audio device" while ignoring the default device, "VoiceMeeter Input"



      I found Microsoft's documentation on volume control but I can't make heads or tails of it. Perhaps the answer is in here, if I knew what to look for.










      share|improve this question














      I have Voicemeeter Banana running normally, this means that it is my default audio device in exclusive mode so most of my sound is routed through it. This gives me great control over the audio devices in my system, virtual or hardware.



      I use the volume keys on my keyboard often. When I'm using Voicemeeter, the volume keys adjust the "Voicemeeter input" which does not change the levels through my headset at all. So to change the levels in my usb headset, I have to either go into the windows volume mixer, and adjust the master for the device there, or adjust it in voicemeeter. I prefer to use the windows adjustment, it goes from 0-100 in increments of 2, while voicemeeter goes from -60dB to +12dB. Plus windows has a small popup that shows the volume level, voicemeeter does not. My max volume is set to the level of my usb headset, meaning I have to turn my headset up to max, and control to taste from voicemeeter. This is dangerous when I'm not paying attention to voicemeeter, and accidentally play something at full volume (painful, not fun).



      Voicemeeter allows me to hook the volume keys to the output assigned to my usb headset, but then I run into the problem of having to adjust voicemeeter.



      I want to be able to change what audio device my keyboard volume keys control.



      Now I know this is somewhat possible as my usb headset (no special drivers) has volume buttons that adjust the levels of the usb headset at a driver level, not my default device which is "Voicemeeter input" While my Keyboard keys adjust the level of "Voicemeeter input"



      What commands are being sent by my keyboard and my headset? Is there a way to find out? Neither are using special drivers. Can I change those commands? Or at least change how my system reacts to them?



      The ideal situation would be the ability to set the volume keys to change the levels of "USB audio device" while ignoring the default device, "VoiceMeeter Input"



      I found Microsoft's documentation on volume control but I can't make heads or tails of it. Perhaps the answer is in here, if I knew what to look for.







      windows-10 audio keyboard hotkeys media






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Jan 12 '17 at 2:03









      BLARGBLARG

      6619




      6619






















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          1














          I found a solution! I used a combination of nircmd and autohotkey.



          I used Nircmd, for the device specific volume controls and autohokey for the macros.



          this is my script:



          Volume_Up::
          Run, nircmd.exe changesysvolume 1000 USBSpeakers 4
          Return

          Volume_Down::
          Run, nircmd.exe changesysvolume -1000 USBSpeakers 4
          Return


          Real simple, but the nircmd command took a bit of finicking as I had to rename my device to USBSpeakers and the '4' was required but not super obvious, so there was a bit of trial and error.



          I tried autohotkey's built in volume control, but I could not get it to work for any device other than the default.



          I will try to refine this solution further, as I'm currently using 3 different programs, ideally I'd like to just be using voicemeeter.






          share|improve this answer
























          • So, what device and how did you change its name to "USBSpeakers"? I have the same problem with 2 physical speakers on my computer set as OUT on VoiceMeeter.

            – Josh
            Jan 26 '17 at 18:04













          • I changed my USB headset name to USB speakers and the matching mic to USBmicrophone. In the windows audio settings, you can change the name of any device by going to the first tab in the properties. What do you want to be able to do?

            – BLARG
            Jan 27 '17 at 18:51













          • So, I have a Bose SoundLink Mini II (connected via Bluetooth) and a Harmon SoundSticks (connected via 3.5mm jack). I want to be able to play music via both speakers at the same time. I was able to do it via VoiceMeeter. However, the keyboard volume buttons do not work with VoiceMeeter (I tried the macros and everything). I want to be able to control the volume via keyboard volume controls. So, I was looking for a solution and came across yours.

            – Josh
            Jan 28 '17 at 14:57













          • as @user258609 said above, you can use the Voicemeeter Macrobuttons found under settings to control the program with any key-presses. There's even a short-cut option that allows you to control voicemeeter with the buttons. It's under the pulldown menu and says "hook volume keys for A1 Levels."

            – BLARG
            Feb 14 '17 at 0:16





















          0














          Voicemeeter is installed with MacroButtons Application allowing you to control anythings (any buttons or slider) on Voicemeeter with any keyboard Shortcut... see user manual: http://vb-audio.pagesperso-orange.fr/Voicemeeter/VoicemeeterBanana_UserManual.pdf






          share|improve this answer
























          • Awesome, this is getting closer. It lets me hook the volume keys to do whatever I want, perfect. controlling the volume seems to be the more difficult part. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/… is there a command that I could run inside macro buttons to change the volume, or would I have to build the sample that microsoft provides?

            – BLARG
            Jan 13 '17 at 0:41













          • if controlling BUS slider on Voicemeeter is not enough you maybe can also send keyboard command to Windows by adding instructions to your macrobuttons script: try for example System.KeyPress("VOLUMEDOWN"); See "System KeyDown / KeyUp / KeyPress " in user manual...

            – user258609
            Jan 13 '17 at 12:20











          • I've solved it.

            – BLARG
            Jan 14 '17 at 1:38



















          0














          Took sometime looking around but i found a program which both lets you set the volume keys to control another Sound device & views a OSD with the volume when you change it



          Its called Volume2 (https://github.com/irzyxa/Volume2)



          It also lets you customize the OSD Displayed with different skins & colours, and Position & Transparency, it can be installed or be a portable version



          Its easy to use & it can alot of stuff i don't use but others might want to






          share|improve this answer























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            3 Answers
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            3 Answers
            3






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            1














            I found a solution! I used a combination of nircmd and autohotkey.



            I used Nircmd, for the device specific volume controls and autohokey for the macros.



            this is my script:



            Volume_Up::
            Run, nircmd.exe changesysvolume 1000 USBSpeakers 4
            Return

            Volume_Down::
            Run, nircmd.exe changesysvolume -1000 USBSpeakers 4
            Return


            Real simple, but the nircmd command took a bit of finicking as I had to rename my device to USBSpeakers and the '4' was required but not super obvious, so there was a bit of trial and error.



            I tried autohotkey's built in volume control, but I could not get it to work for any device other than the default.



            I will try to refine this solution further, as I'm currently using 3 different programs, ideally I'd like to just be using voicemeeter.






            share|improve this answer
























            • So, what device and how did you change its name to "USBSpeakers"? I have the same problem with 2 physical speakers on my computer set as OUT on VoiceMeeter.

              – Josh
              Jan 26 '17 at 18:04













            • I changed my USB headset name to USB speakers and the matching mic to USBmicrophone. In the windows audio settings, you can change the name of any device by going to the first tab in the properties. What do you want to be able to do?

              – BLARG
              Jan 27 '17 at 18:51













            • So, I have a Bose SoundLink Mini II (connected via Bluetooth) and a Harmon SoundSticks (connected via 3.5mm jack). I want to be able to play music via both speakers at the same time. I was able to do it via VoiceMeeter. However, the keyboard volume buttons do not work with VoiceMeeter (I tried the macros and everything). I want to be able to control the volume via keyboard volume controls. So, I was looking for a solution and came across yours.

              – Josh
              Jan 28 '17 at 14:57













            • as @user258609 said above, you can use the Voicemeeter Macrobuttons found under settings to control the program with any key-presses. There's even a short-cut option that allows you to control voicemeeter with the buttons. It's under the pulldown menu and says "hook volume keys for A1 Levels."

              – BLARG
              Feb 14 '17 at 0:16


















            1














            I found a solution! I used a combination of nircmd and autohotkey.



            I used Nircmd, for the device specific volume controls and autohokey for the macros.



            this is my script:



            Volume_Up::
            Run, nircmd.exe changesysvolume 1000 USBSpeakers 4
            Return

            Volume_Down::
            Run, nircmd.exe changesysvolume -1000 USBSpeakers 4
            Return


            Real simple, but the nircmd command took a bit of finicking as I had to rename my device to USBSpeakers and the '4' was required but not super obvious, so there was a bit of trial and error.



            I tried autohotkey's built in volume control, but I could not get it to work for any device other than the default.



            I will try to refine this solution further, as I'm currently using 3 different programs, ideally I'd like to just be using voicemeeter.






            share|improve this answer
























            • So, what device and how did you change its name to "USBSpeakers"? I have the same problem with 2 physical speakers on my computer set as OUT on VoiceMeeter.

              – Josh
              Jan 26 '17 at 18:04













            • I changed my USB headset name to USB speakers and the matching mic to USBmicrophone. In the windows audio settings, you can change the name of any device by going to the first tab in the properties. What do you want to be able to do?

              – BLARG
              Jan 27 '17 at 18:51













            • So, I have a Bose SoundLink Mini II (connected via Bluetooth) and a Harmon SoundSticks (connected via 3.5mm jack). I want to be able to play music via both speakers at the same time. I was able to do it via VoiceMeeter. However, the keyboard volume buttons do not work with VoiceMeeter (I tried the macros and everything). I want to be able to control the volume via keyboard volume controls. So, I was looking for a solution and came across yours.

              – Josh
              Jan 28 '17 at 14:57













            • as @user258609 said above, you can use the Voicemeeter Macrobuttons found under settings to control the program with any key-presses. There's even a short-cut option that allows you to control voicemeeter with the buttons. It's under the pulldown menu and says "hook volume keys for A1 Levels."

              – BLARG
              Feb 14 '17 at 0:16
















            1












            1








            1







            I found a solution! I used a combination of nircmd and autohotkey.



            I used Nircmd, for the device specific volume controls and autohokey for the macros.



            this is my script:



            Volume_Up::
            Run, nircmd.exe changesysvolume 1000 USBSpeakers 4
            Return

            Volume_Down::
            Run, nircmd.exe changesysvolume -1000 USBSpeakers 4
            Return


            Real simple, but the nircmd command took a bit of finicking as I had to rename my device to USBSpeakers and the '4' was required but not super obvious, so there was a bit of trial and error.



            I tried autohotkey's built in volume control, but I could not get it to work for any device other than the default.



            I will try to refine this solution further, as I'm currently using 3 different programs, ideally I'd like to just be using voicemeeter.






            share|improve this answer













            I found a solution! I used a combination of nircmd and autohotkey.



            I used Nircmd, for the device specific volume controls and autohokey for the macros.



            this is my script:



            Volume_Up::
            Run, nircmd.exe changesysvolume 1000 USBSpeakers 4
            Return

            Volume_Down::
            Run, nircmd.exe changesysvolume -1000 USBSpeakers 4
            Return


            Real simple, but the nircmd command took a bit of finicking as I had to rename my device to USBSpeakers and the '4' was required but not super obvious, so there was a bit of trial and error.



            I tried autohotkey's built in volume control, but I could not get it to work for any device other than the default.



            I will try to refine this solution further, as I'm currently using 3 different programs, ideally I'd like to just be using voicemeeter.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Jan 13 '17 at 5:55









            BLARGBLARG

            6619




            6619













            • So, what device and how did you change its name to "USBSpeakers"? I have the same problem with 2 physical speakers on my computer set as OUT on VoiceMeeter.

              – Josh
              Jan 26 '17 at 18:04













            • I changed my USB headset name to USB speakers and the matching mic to USBmicrophone. In the windows audio settings, you can change the name of any device by going to the first tab in the properties. What do you want to be able to do?

              – BLARG
              Jan 27 '17 at 18:51













            • So, I have a Bose SoundLink Mini II (connected via Bluetooth) and a Harmon SoundSticks (connected via 3.5mm jack). I want to be able to play music via both speakers at the same time. I was able to do it via VoiceMeeter. However, the keyboard volume buttons do not work with VoiceMeeter (I tried the macros and everything). I want to be able to control the volume via keyboard volume controls. So, I was looking for a solution and came across yours.

              – Josh
              Jan 28 '17 at 14:57













            • as @user258609 said above, you can use the Voicemeeter Macrobuttons found under settings to control the program with any key-presses. There's even a short-cut option that allows you to control voicemeeter with the buttons. It's under the pulldown menu and says "hook volume keys for A1 Levels."

              – BLARG
              Feb 14 '17 at 0:16





















            • So, what device and how did you change its name to "USBSpeakers"? I have the same problem with 2 physical speakers on my computer set as OUT on VoiceMeeter.

              – Josh
              Jan 26 '17 at 18:04













            • I changed my USB headset name to USB speakers and the matching mic to USBmicrophone. In the windows audio settings, you can change the name of any device by going to the first tab in the properties. What do you want to be able to do?

              – BLARG
              Jan 27 '17 at 18:51













            • So, I have a Bose SoundLink Mini II (connected via Bluetooth) and a Harmon SoundSticks (connected via 3.5mm jack). I want to be able to play music via both speakers at the same time. I was able to do it via VoiceMeeter. However, the keyboard volume buttons do not work with VoiceMeeter (I tried the macros and everything). I want to be able to control the volume via keyboard volume controls. So, I was looking for a solution and came across yours.

              – Josh
              Jan 28 '17 at 14:57













            • as @user258609 said above, you can use the Voicemeeter Macrobuttons found under settings to control the program with any key-presses. There's even a short-cut option that allows you to control voicemeeter with the buttons. It's under the pulldown menu and says "hook volume keys for A1 Levels."

              – BLARG
              Feb 14 '17 at 0:16



















            So, what device and how did you change its name to "USBSpeakers"? I have the same problem with 2 physical speakers on my computer set as OUT on VoiceMeeter.

            – Josh
            Jan 26 '17 at 18:04







            So, what device and how did you change its name to "USBSpeakers"? I have the same problem with 2 physical speakers on my computer set as OUT on VoiceMeeter.

            – Josh
            Jan 26 '17 at 18:04















            I changed my USB headset name to USB speakers and the matching mic to USBmicrophone. In the windows audio settings, you can change the name of any device by going to the first tab in the properties. What do you want to be able to do?

            – BLARG
            Jan 27 '17 at 18:51







            I changed my USB headset name to USB speakers and the matching mic to USBmicrophone. In the windows audio settings, you can change the name of any device by going to the first tab in the properties. What do you want to be able to do?

            – BLARG
            Jan 27 '17 at 18:51















            So, I have a Bose SoundLink Mini II (connected via Bluetooth) and a Harmon SoundSticks (connected via 3.5mm jack). I want to be able to play music via both speakers at the same time. I was able to do it via VoiceMeeter. However, the keyboard volume buttons do not work with VoiceMeeter (I tried the macros and everything). I want to be able to control the volume via keyboard volume controls. So, I was looking for a solution and came across yours.

            – Josh
            Jan 28 '17 at 14:57







            So, I have a Bose SoundLink Mini II (connected via Bluetooth) and a Harmon SoundSticks (connected via 3.5mm jack). I want to be able to play music via both speakers at the same time. I was able to do it via VoiceMeeter. However, the keyboard volume buttons do not work with VoiceMeeter (I tried the macros and everything). I want to be able to control the volume via keyboard volume controls. So, I was looking for a solution and came across yours.

            – Josh
            Jan 28 '17 at 14:57















            as @user258609 said above, you can use the Voicemeeter Macrobuttons found under settings to control the program with any key-presses. There's even a short-cut option that allows you to control voicemeeter with the buttons. It's under the pulldown menu and says "hook volume keys for A1 Levels."

            – BLARG
            Feb 14 '17 at 0:16







            as @user258609 said above, you can use the Voicemeeter Macrobuttons found under settings to control the program with any key-presses. There's even a short-cut option that allows you to control voicemeeter with the buttons. It's under the pulldown menu and says "hook volume keys for A1 Levels."

            – BLARG
            Feb 14 '17 at 0:16















            0














            Voicemeeter is installed with MacroButtons Application allowing you to control anythings (any buttons or slider) on Voicemeeter with any keyboard Shortcut... see user manual: http://vb-audio.pagesperso-orange.fr/Voicemeeter/VoicemeeterBanana_UserManual.pdf






            share|improve this answer
























            • Awesome, this is getting closer. It lets me hook the volume keys to do whatever I want, perfect. controlling the volume seems to be the more difficult part. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/… is there a command that I could run inside macro buttons to change the volume, or would I have to build the sample that microsoft provides?

              – BLARG
              Jan 13 '17 at 0:41













            • if controlling BUS slider on Voicemeeter is not enough you maybe can also send keyboard command to Windows by adding instructions to your macrobuttons script: try for example System.KeyPress("VOLUMEDOWN"); See "System KeyDown / KeyUp / KeyPress " in user manual...

              – user258609
              Jan 13 '17 at 12:20











            • I've solved it.

              – BLARG
              Jan 14 '17 at 1:38
















            0














            Voicemeeter is installed with MacroButtons Application allowing you to control anythings (any buttons or slider) on Voicemeeter with any keyboard Shortcut... see user manual: http://vb-audio.pagesperso-orange.fr/Voicemeeter/VoicemeeterBanana_UserManual.pdf






            share|improve this answer
























            • Awesome, this is getting closer. It lets me hook the volume keys to do whatever I want, perfect. controlling the volume seems to be the more difficult part. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/… is there a command that I could run inside macro buttons to change the volume, or would I have to build the sample that microsoft provides?

              – BLARG
              Jan 13 '17 at 0:41













            • if controlling BUS slider on Voicemeeter is not enough you maybe can also send keyboard command to Windows by adding instructions to your macrobuttons script: try for example System.KeyPress("VOLUMEDOWN"); See "System KeyDown / KeyUp / KeyPress " in user manual...

              – user258609
              Jan 13 '17 at 12:20











            • I've solved it.

              – BLARG
              Jan 14 '17 at 1:38














            0












            0








            0







            Voicemeeter is installed with MacroButtons Application allowing you to control anythings (any buttons or slider) on Voicemeeter with any keyboard Shortcut... see user manual: http://vb-audio.pagesperso-orange.fr/Voicemeeter/VoicemeeterBanana_UserManual.pdf






            share|improve this answer













            Voicemeeter is installed with MacroButtons Application allowing you to control anythings (any buttons or slider) on Voicemeeter with any keyboard Shortcut... see user manual: http://vb-audio.pagesperso-orange.fr/Voicemeeter/VoicemeeterBanana_UserManual.pdf







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Jan 12 '17 at 8:10









            user258609user258609

            33116




            33116













            • Awesome, this is getting closer. It lets me hook the volume keys to do whatever I want, perfect. controlling the volume seems to be the more difficult part. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/… is there a command that I could run inside macro buttons to change the volume, or would I have to build the sample that microsoft provides?

              – BLARG
              Jan 13 '17 at 0:41













            • if controlling BUS slider on Voicemeeter is not enough you maybe can also send keyboard command to Windows by adding instructions to your macrobuttons script: try for example System.KeyPress("VOLUMEDOWN"); See "System KeyDown / KeyUp / KeyPress " in user manual...

              – user258609
              Jan 13 '17 at 12:20











            • I've solved it.

              – BLARG
              Jan 14 '17 at 1:38



















            • Awesome, this is getting closer. It lets me hook the volume keys to do whatever I want, perfect. controlling the volume seems to be the more difficult part. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/… is there a command that I could run inside macro buttons to change the volume, or would I have to build the sample that microsoft provides?

              – BLARG
              Jan 13 '17 at 0:41













            • if controlling BUS slider on Voicemeeter is not enough you maybe can also send keyboard command to Windows by adding instructions to your macrobuttons script: try for example System.KeyPress("VOLUMEDOWN"); See "System KeyDown / KeyUp / KeyPress " in user manual...

              – user258609
              Jan 13 '17 at 12:20











            • I've solved it.

              – BLARG
              Jan 14 '17 at 1:38

















            Awesome, this is getting closer. It lets me hook the volume keys to do whatever I want, perfect. controlling the volume seems to be the more difficult part. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/… is there a command that I could run inside macro buttons to change the volume, or would I have to build the sample that microsoft provides?

            – BLARG
            Jan 13 '17 at 0:41







            Awesome, this is getting closer. It lets me hook the volume keys to do whatever I want, perfect. controlling the volume seems to be the more difficult part. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/… is there a command that I could run inside macro buttons to change the volume, or would I have to build the sample that microsoft provides?

            – BLARG
            Jan 13 '17 at 0:41















            if controlling BUS slider on Voicemeeter is not enough you maybe can also send keyboard command to Windows by adding instructions to your macrobuttons script: try for example System.KeyPress("VOLUMEDOWN"); See "System KeyDown / KeyUp / KeyPress " in user manual...

            – user258609
            Jan 13 '17 at 12:20





            if controlling BUS slider on Voicemeeter is not enough you maybe can also send keyboard command to Windows by adding instructions to your macrobuttons script: try for example System.KeyPress("VOLUMEDOWN"); See "System KeyDown / KeyUp / KeyPress " in user manual...

            – user258609
            Jan 13 '17 at 12:20













            I've solved it.

            – BLARG
            Jan 14 '17 at 1:38





            I've solved it.

            – BLARG
            Jan 14 '17 at 1:38











            0














            Took sometime looking around but i found a program which both lets you set the volume keys to control another Sound device & views a OSD with the volume when you change it



            Its called Volume2 (https://github.com/irzyxa/Volume2)



            It also lets you customize the OSD Displayed with different skins & colours, and Position & Transparency, it can be installed or be a portable version



            Its easy to use & it can alot of stuff i don't use but others might want to






            share|improve this answer




























              0














              Took sometime looking around but i found a program which both lets you set the volume keys to control another Sound device & views a OSD with the volume when you change it



              Its called Volume2 (https://github.com/irzyxa/Volume2)



              It also lets you customize the OSD Displayed with different skins & colours, and Position & Transparency, it can be installed or be a portable version



              Its easy to use & it can alot of stuff i don't use but others might want to






              share|improve this answer


























                0












                0








                0







                Took sometime looking around but i found a program which both lets you set the volume keys to control another Sound device & views a OSD with the volume when you change it



                Its called Volume2 (https://github.com/irzyxa/Volume2)



                It also lets you customize the OSD Displayed with different skins & colours, and Position & Transparency, it can be installed or be a portable version



                Its easy to use & it can alot of stuff i don't use but others might want to






                share|improve this answer













                Took sometime looking around but i found a program which both lets you set the volume keys to control another Sound device & views a OSD with the volume when you change it



                Its called Volume2 (https://github.com/irzyxa/Volume2)



                It also lets you customize the OSD Displayed with different skins & colours, and Position & Transparency, it can be installed or be a portable version



                Its easy to use & it can alot of stuff i don't use but others might want to







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Feb 18 at 15:17









                markaabomarkaabo

                1




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