Well, the combination of speakup soft synth, speechd-up, speech dispatcher and the espeakup driver does work, as far as using speakup-r goes. I am not sure if its really using indexing, but it has that effect. Shawn Kirkpatrick <shawn@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > I assume you're talking about indexing working with speakup and not > orca? What version of speakup are you using? I don't see how indexing > could be working since the soft synth driver doesn't seem to send any > codes that would allow it to work. Unless things have changed pretty > recently. In that case writing indexing support in to my program > probably wouldn't be that hard. Of course not all hardware synths will > do indexing anyway. > > On Mon, 29 Feb 2016, covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > > > hmmm, I am using 0.8.3 of speech dispatcher and not seeing any > > segfaults or any such and indexing works fine -- although my speechd-up > > was compiled from a source which maybe you don't have, I am not sure > > where this came from. I was thinking that the output module for a > > hardware synth would not be too hard to write and that is why I > > suggested it. Your ideais nice, but remember we would want this to work > > with orca as well as a client, otherwise for those who use both speakup > > and orca, it would be a mess. > > > > I can send you my source for speechd-up, if you would like. > > > > Shawn Kirkpatrick <shawn@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > >> I thought of writing a speechdispatcher driver but there were some > >> problems. When I've tried speechdispatcher with software speech there > >> were lags and little glitches. I'm not sure if these were being > >> introduced by speechdispatcher, speechd-up, or some combination of the > >> two. Also, my version of speechdispatcher has a nasty habbit of > >> segfaulting, not sure why. > >> I don't think this would solve the indexing problem anyway, as far as I > >> know speechd-up uses speakup's software synth driver and that doesn't > >> support indexing, or has this changed? I also think the less layers > >> you have between speakup and the synth the better, one program is > >> probably better than two. > >> What I'd really like to do, if I ever have the time, is write a speach > >> daemon to replace this whole mess. Something like speechdispatcher but > >> with more modularity. There could be modules for output, allowing > >> hardware and software synth support. Modules for input, for various > >> forms of input like speechdispatcher compatibility, speakup, fifo, or > >> anything else that might be needed. Modules for conversion, allowing > >> things like a word dictionary, number processing, etc. The main goal > >> of the program would be to get fast, responsive speech from whatever > >> synth the user chooses to use. > >> I think this would be a worthwhile project it would just require time > >> to write. > >> > >> On Fri, 26 Feb 2016, covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote: > >> > >>> Shawn, maybe it might be easier and more universal to write a speech > >>> dispatcher driver instead? That way, if you use speechd-up, indexing > >>> would work. What do you think? > >>> > >>> Shawn Kirkpatrick <shawn@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > >>> > >>>> I've written a program that will allow hardware synthesizers to be > >>>> used with speakup even thoe the serial support seems to be currently > >>>> broken. I wrote this program about a year ago when I thought this > >>>> problem would be only temporary. Since it seems like the hardware > >>>> synthesizer support is still broken and isn't going to be fixed > >>>> anytime soon I thought I'd put it out there in case it can be of some > >>>> use. > >>>> The program is called speakupbridge. > >>>> speakupbridge is a program which makes it possible for speakup to use > >>>> external serial, parallel, or usb synthesizers. It does this by reading > >>>> speakup's softsynth device and passing the text to the synthesizer. > >>>> speakupbridge has the following features: > >>>> * The ability to communicate with any device that can accept a string > >>>> of text using a /dev interface. > >>>> * The ability to define the commands used by the synthesizer in a > >>>> user-editable configuration file. > >>>> * Multiple synthesizer definitions in a single configuration file. > >>>> * Change the pronunciation of words using a dictionary file (a feature > >>>> speakup > >>>> really should do itself). > >>>> * Save and reload speakup settings for each defined synthesizer. > >>>> For more information or to download the program please visit: > >>>> http://www.shawnk.ca/speakup > >>>> I haven't had a lot of time to work on or test this code lately so > >>>> there's likely to be some rough spots. You'll have to compile the code > >>>> but that should be easy enough. I've tested this with my serial Artic > >>>> transport synthesizer and it seems to work. I don't use speakup > >>>> regularly thoe (too many other missing/bbroken features) so this > >>>> program really hasn't had any hard testing. > >>>> This solution isn't perfect, you still won't get kernel messages from > >>>> boot up but it least it should be possible to use a hardware > >>>> synthesizer once the system is started and that's probably better than > >>>> nothing at all. > >>>> > >>>> _______________________________________________ > >>>> Speakup mailing list > >>>> Speakup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > >>>> http://linux-speakup.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/speakup > >>>> > >>> > >>> -- > >>> Your life is like a penny. You're going to lose it. The question is: > >>> How do > >>> you spend it? > >>> > >>> John Covici > >>> covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx > >>> > >> > > > > -- > > Your life is like a penny. You're going to lose it. The question is: > > How do > > you spend it? > > > > John Covici > > covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > > -- Your life is like a penny. You're going to lose it. The question is: How do you spend it? John Covici covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ Speakup mailing list Speakup@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://linux-speakup.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/speakup