Hello Dave, Dave Mielke <d...@mielke.cc> wrote on Di, Dez 22, 2009 at 04:47:11 -0500: >[quoted lines by Sebastian Humenda on 2009/12/22 at 21:19 +0100] >>No, as far as I know, it speaks anyhow. But I only noticed this with the >>ibmtts. >But what if the new module doesn't support the current language, or, if you >switch them the other way around, what if the new language isn't supported by >the current module? I believe if the current module doesn't support the language, it speaks it's default language. If not, speech-dispatcher has a dummy module which is loaded, when something is badly wrong with the current module.
>>Btw, Orca provides this function to use a different speech-module/language. >Can you please give me a few real examples of how this kind of thing is >specified with Orca? You can at first select the speech system, which in brltty is the speech-driver option. Then you have a list of possible modules, which you can select. In a third list, where you can select languages. If the module is only keepable of handling one language, there is only one shown. My guess is (since I haven't read anything about it) that the speech-dispatcher protocoll provides a list of possible features for each module. Sebastian _______________________________________________ This message was sent via the BRLTTY mailing list. To post a message, send an e-mail to: BRLTTY@mielke.cc For general information, go to: http://mielke.cc/mailman/listinfo/brltty