* working with latest espeak
@ Mark Peveto
[not found] ` <20160815121924.GD20225@thunderbird-2.linux.ds.cam.ac.uk>
0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Mark Peveto @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: espeak list; +Cc: Speakup List
Hello all,
I've been trying to get help on this issue for quite a while, but as of yet have been unsuccessful. i'm trying for a third time and hoping it'll be a charm. I don't usually cross post, but
I'm out of options, and frankly frustraited beyond belief.
Note, the following question reguards the console, not speech in orca using gui. In previous versions of espeak, I was able to use the us english voice instead of the uk one by switching to
my /usr/share/espeak-data/voices folder, and issuing sudo cp en-us en. that worked perfectly until the latest release. The /usr/share/espeak-data/voices directory exists, but those files are
no longer there. How on earth do I get this to speak in the us english voice now?
Mark Peveto
Registered Linux user number 600552
Sent from sonar test box using alpine 2.20.14
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: [Espeak-general] working with latest espeak
[not found] ` <20160815121924.GD20225@thunderbird-2.linux.ds.cam.ac.uk>
@ ` Mark Peveto
` Willem van der Walt
0 siblings, 1 reply; 3+ messages in thread
From: Mark Peveto @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Silas S. Brown; +Cc: espeak list, Speakup List
Hi there,
Thanks for the info. I tried it, but when I log back into my console, I still get uk english. thanks for the tip, though. It was darn sure worth a try.
Mark Peveto
Registered Linux user number 600552
Sent from sonar test box using alpine 2.20.14
On Mon, 15 Aug 2016, Silas S. Brown wrote:
> Hi Mark, I haven't been following espeak-NG development, but I guess it's possible that
> those files are now obsolete and you have to use command-line arguments to set the voice.
> So have you tried this command: espeak -ven-us "hello from America"
>
> If that works and you want to use it in screen readers etc, I expect the best way would
> be to move your real espeak binary to a safe place and create a script called espeak that
> does something like
>
> #!/bin/bash
> espeak -ven-us $@
>
> then save that as /usr/local/bin/espeak and chmod +x it. I'm assuming you're on a
> GNU/Linux or Unix machine; I wouldn't know how to do it on Windows but you might get
> somewhere with batch files. And the above script won't help if the screen reader is
> using the shared library version of eSpeak.
>
> Silas
>
> --
> Silas S Brown http://people.ds.cam.ac.uk/ssb22
>
> "Time and unexpected events overtake them all" - Ecclesiastes 9:11
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 3+ messages in thread
* Re: [Espeak-general] working with latest espeak
` [Espeak-general] " Mark Peveto
@ ` Willem van der Walt
0 siblings, 0 replies; 3+ messages in thread
From: Willem van der Walt @ UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Speakup is a screen review system for Linux.; +Cc: espeak list
Hi mark,
I did not follow this thread, but if you use espeakup, you can specify the
language when you start espeakup.
espeakup -Ven or whatever language you want.
In some distributions, you may even have an espeakup file in
/etc/default/espeakup where you can set it.
HTH, Willem
On Mon, 15 Aug 2016, Mark Peveto wrote:
> Hi there,
> Thanks for the info. I tried it, but when I log back into my console, I still get uk english. thanks for the tip, though. It was darn sure worth a try.
>
>
> Mark Peveto
> Registered Linux user number 600552
> Sent from sonar test box using alpine 2.20.14
>
>
> On Mon, 15 Aug 2016, Silas S. Brown wrote:
>
>> Hi Mark, I haven't been following espeak-NG development, but I guess it's possible that
>> those files are now obsolete and you have to use command-line arguments to set the voice.
>> So have you tried this command: espeak -ven-us "hello from America"
>>
>> If that works and you want to use it in screen readers etc, I expect the best way would
>> be to move your real espeak binary to a safe place and create a script called espeak that
>> does something like
>>
>> #!/bin/bash
>> espeak -ven-us $@
>>
>> then save that as /usr/local/bin/espeak and chmod +x it. I'm assuming you're on a
>> GNU/Linux or Unix machine; I wouldn't know how to do it on Windows but you might get
>> somewhere with batch files. And the above script won't help if the screen reader is
>> using the shared library version of eSpeak.
>>
>> Silas
>>
>> --
>> Silas S Brown http://people.ds.cam.ac.uk/ssb22
>>
>> "Time and unexpected events overtake them all" - Ecclesiastes 9:11
>>
> _______________________________________________
> Speakup mailing list
> Speakup@linux-speakup.org
> http://linux-speakup.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/speakup
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working with latest espeak Mark Peveto
[not found] ` <20160815121924.GD20225@thunderbird-2.linux.ds.cam.ac.uk>
` [Espeak-general] " Mark Peveto
` Willem van der Walt
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