From 43b650ae447724e77316ae11d72404cabdab7ec5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Lyn Perrine Date: Sun, 6 Oct 2019 03:33:57 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] Fix capitliaziation --- source/2/2.5/2.5.2/pulseaudio_volume_control.rst | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/source/2/2.5/2.5.2/pulseaudio_volume_control.rst b/source/2/2.5/2.5.2/pulseaudio_volume_control.rst index 136f19e7..d69b00c4 100644 --- a/source/2/2.5/2.5.2/pulseaudio_volume_control.rst +++ b/source/2/2.5/2.5.2/pulseaudio_volume_control.rst @@ -1,11 +1,11 @@ -Chapter 2.5.2 Pulse Audio Volume Control +Chapter 2.5.2 PulseAudio Volume Control ======================================== Pulse Audio volume control is the default volume mixer for Lubuntu. Usage ------ -The :guilabel:`Playback` tab of pulseaudio volume control gives you the ability to the control the output device, mute, or change the volume of each application. To change the Volume of each application on the playback slide the slider to the right for more volume or to the left for less volume. Above your volume slider the is a bar that shows how much volume is currently emitted by that particular application. The button with an X over the speaker is a mute button and if it is a darker gray that application is currently muted and can't make any sound. The drop down :guilabel:`Show` menu lets you see your virtual streams and applications. In the bottom right hand corner is the current volume level viewed as a percentage. This program also in software allows you to go over 100 percent if it is too quiet. If you have multiple sound outputs plugged in you can change what output a particular application plays out of by checking the checkbox next to the :guilabel:`on` to change what the sound plays from. +The :guilabel:`Playback` tab of PulseAudio Volume Control gives you the ability to the control the output device, mute, or change the volume of each application. To change the Volume of each application on the playback slide the slider to the right for more volume or to the left for less volume. Above your volume slider the is a bar that shows how much volume is currently emitted by that particular application. The button with an X over the speaker is a mute button and if it is a darker gray that application is currently muted and can't make any sound. The drop down :guilabel:`Show` menu lets you see your virtual streams and applications. In the bottom right hand corner is the current volume level viewed as a percentage. This program also in software allows you to go over 100 percent if it is too quiet. If you have multiple sound outputs plugged in you can change what output a particular application plays out of by checking the checkbox next to the :guilabel:`on` to change what the sound plays from. .. image:: pavucontrol-playback.png