Hi,
Anyone familiar with how to change speech pace with python script?
Thanks!
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On Jun 3, 12:28 pm, Stef Mientki wrote:
> eric_dex...@msn.com wrote:
> > I wrote a small pre-processor for python documentation and I am
> > looking for advice on how to get the most natural sounding reading. I
> > uploaded an example of a reading of lxml documentation as a podcast1
>
> >htt
eric_dex...@msn.com wrote:
I wrote a small pre-processor for python documentation and I am
looking for advice on how to get the most natural sounding reading. I
uploaded an example of a reading of lxml documentation as a podcast1
http://dexrow.blogspot.com/2009/06/python-voice-preprocessor
On Jun 2, 7:52 pm, "eric_dex...@msn.com" wrote:
> I wrote a small pre-processor for python documentation and I am
> looking for advice on how to get the most natural sounding reading. I
> uploaded an example of a reading of lxml documentation as a podcast1
>
> http://dexrow.blogspot.com/2009
I wrote a small pre-processor for python documentation and I am
looking for advice on how to get the most natural sounding reading. I
uploaded an example of a reading of lxml documentation as a podcast1
http://dexrow.blogspot.com/2009/06/python-voice-preprocessor.html.
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http://mail.pytho
Hi Graham,
Ahh, that works! Thank you... :-)
Brian
---
Graham Dumpleton wrote:
> On Jun 21, 9:41 am, Brian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Hello,
>>
>> Does anyone know how to get Python to be able to perform text-to-speech
>> abilities for the Mac (OS X)?
On Jun 21, 9:41 am, Brian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Does anyone know how to get Python to be able to perform text-to-speech
> abilities for the Mac (OS X)? I have been searching Google, but have
> not found any helpful solutions or resources yet.
os.system(&
Hello,
Does anyone know how to get Python to be able to perform text-to-speech
abilities for the Mac (OS X)? I have been searching Google, but have
not found any helpful solutions or resources yet.
Brian
---
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Michael Spencer wrote:
> How about a category for executable limericks?
>
> Here's one to get the ball rolling:
>
>
> # voice only the alphanumeric tokens
>
> from itertools import repeat
> for feet in [3,3,2,2,3]:
> print " ".join("DA-DA-DUM"
> for dummy in [None]
> for foot in repeat("
[Michael]
> from itertools import repeat
> for feet in [3,3,2,2,3]:
> print " ".join("DA-DA-DUM"
> for dummy in [None]
> for foot in repeat("metric", feet))
Spectacular! +1 QOTW
--
Richie Hindle
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Michael Spencer wrote:
How about a category for executable limericks?
That was my thought too...
for programmer in search_of("elegance"):
if programmer.needs("an experience"):
print "whitespace counts much"
if Van_Rossum is Dutch:
print "Dictators are made by benevolence"
And an att
On Tue, 22 Mar 2005 03:42:05 GMT, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bengt Richter) wrote:
[...]
>A fan of Monty and all was Guido,
>which inluenced much of what he'd do.
...
Oy. Re-reading => DAPR (Day After Posting Remorse) ;-/
Oh well.
Regards,
Bengt Richter
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Michael Spencer wrote:
How about a category for executable limericks?
Here's one to get the ball rolling:
# voice only the alphanumeric tokens
from itertools import repeat
for feet in [3,3,2,2,3]:
print " ".join("DA-DA-DUM"
for dummy in [None]
for foot in repeat("metric", feet))
Brilliant!
How about a category for executable limericks?
Here's one to get the ball rolling:
# voice only the alphanumeric tokens
from itertools import repeat
for feet in [3,3,2,2,3]:
print " ".join("DA-DA-DUM"
for dummy in [None]
for foot in repeat("metric", feet))
Michael
P.S. I know 'three' doesn
On Mon, 21 Mar 2005 15:39:45 +1100, Tim Churches <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Steve Holden wrote:
>> Tim Churches wrote:
>>> There once was a language called Python...
>>>
>>> (which is pretty close to having three anapaestic left feet)
>>>
>>> or more promisingly, rhyme-wise, but metrically rather
Bill Mill wrote:
T'were two coders in c.l.p
Who liked to argue legally
About copyright
All day and night,
Just to prove their inanity
Nit-picking: Bill, you missed an "s" in that last word...
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Paul Rubin wrote:
Scott David Daniels <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
A mathematician, prophetic,
invented a language, herpetic.
decidedly brilliant,
syntacticly elegant,
syntactically elegant,
with features intelligent
Made ideas far less hypothetic.
Made writing new code copasetic.
W
On 21 Mar 2005 12:47:07 -0800, Paul McGuire <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Brian,
>
> Having reviewed your Cease and Desist petition, I'm afraid I must
> dispute some or all of your claims:
>
> 1. Your citation of prior art has one or more significant defects:
> a. In your citation, "brace" is clea
Brian,
Having reviewed your Cease and Desist petition, I'm afraid I must
dispute some or all of your claims:
1. Your citation of prior art has one or more significant defects:
a. In your citation, "brace" is clearly rhymed with "whitespace", not
"space". The broad concept of "whitespace" is subs
Scott David Daniels <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>A mathematician, prophetic,
>invented a language, herpetic.
> decidedly brilliant,
> syntacticly elegant,
syntactically elegant,
with features intelligent
>Made ideas far less hypothetic.
Made writing new code copasetic.
--
Tim Churches wrote:
...
My first attempt (which does not scan properly):
A Dutch mathematician most prophetic,
Did invent a language, name herpetic.
With design quite intelligent,
And syntax mostly elegant,
Big ideas could be made non-hypothetic.
To improve the scan:
A mathematician, propheti
Paul McGuire said unto the world upon 2005-03-21 03:10:
How about a clerihew instead of a limerick?
Guido van Rossum
Had an idea most awesome.
When he lost track of his braces,
Just replaced them with spaces.
-- Paul McGuire
Hi all,
that's pretty good, Paul.
However, I must insist that you both cea
This is about poetry. I think the next reply should be done privately unless
someone else is interested in it.
Hi,
Le dimanche 20 Mars 2005 23:04, Paul Rubin a écrit :
> Francis Girard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > 4- Propose a synonym that will fit in a verse, i.e. with the right amount
> > o
Charles Hartman wrote:
Maybe you can bind Festival
(http://www.cstr.ed.ac.uk/projects/festival/download.html) with SWIG.
Presumably somebody could; at this point it's well beyond me. But thank
you for the suggestion.
Charles Hartman
http://cherry.conncoll.edu/cohar
There is tkfestival http://lu
Maybe you can bind Festival
(http://www.cstr.ed.ac.uk/projects/festival/download.html) with SWIG.
Presumably somebody could; at this point it's well beyond me. But thank
you for the suggestion.
Charles Hartman
http://cherry.conncoll.edu/cohar
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Hello Charles,
> Does anyone know of a cross-platform (OSX and Windows at least) library
> for text-to-speech? I know there's an OSX API, and probably also for
> Windows. I know PyTTS exists, but it seems to talk only to the Windows
> engine. I'd like to write a single P
How about a clerihew instead of a limerick?
Guido van Rossum
Had an idea most awesome.
When he lost track of his braces,
Just replaced them with spaces.
-- Paul McGuire
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
Steve Holden said unto the world upon 2005-03-20 16:18:
Since it's PyCon week, I will offer a prize of $100 to the best (in my
opinion) limerick about Python posted to this list (with a Cc: to
[EMAIL PROTECTED]) before midday on Friday. The prize money will be my
own, so there are no other rule
Steve Holden wrote:
> Tim Churches wrote:
>> There once was a language called Python...
>>
>> (which is pretty close to having three anapaestic left feet)
>>
>> or more promisingly, rhyme-wise, but metrically rather worse :
>>
>> There once was a mathematician named van Rossum...
>>
>> Tim C
>>
> O
Francis Girard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 4- Propose a synonym that will fit in a verse, i.e. with the right amount of
> syllabs
>
> 5- Suggest a missing word or expression in a verse by applying the Shannon
> text generation principle
> ...
> First, do you think it may be a useful tool ?
> W
*Virtual Muse: Experiments in Computer
Poetry"[1], for example, deal almost entirely with language as a
typographical phenomenon. So does my Scandroid, even though the
material it's working with is all aimed at and motivated by the
auditory qualities of poetry.
I do imagine you're ri
Charles Hartman wrote:
Does anyone know of a cross-platform (OSX and Windows at least)
library
for text-to-speech? I know there's an OSX API, and probably also for
Windows. I know PyTTS exists, but it seems to talk only to the Windows
engine. I'd like to write a single Python module to hand
On Sun, 20 Mar 2005 16:18:14 -0500, Steve Holden wrote:
> Since it's PyCon week, I will offer a prize of $100 to the best (in my
> opinion) limerick about Python posted to this list (with a Cc: to
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]) before midday on Friday. The prize money will be my
> own, so there are no oth
On some flavors of Windows you can use:
import pyTTS
tts = pyTTS.Create()
tts.Speak('This is the sound of my voice.')
On Mac OS X you can use:
import os
os.system("say 'This is the sound of my voice.'")
You could write a wrapper that takes a string and checks to see which
OS you are on and exec
Tim Churches wrote:
Charles Hartman wrote:
Does anyone know of a cross-platform (OSX and Windows at least) library
for text-to-speech? I know there's an OSX API, and probably also for
Windows. I know PyTTS exists, but it seems to talk only to the Windows
engine. I'd like to write a sin
of a cross-platform (OSX and Windows at least) library
> for text-to-speech? I know there's an OSX API, and probably also for
> Windows. I know PyTTS exists, but it seems to talk only to the Windows
> engine. I'd like to write a single Python module to handle this on both
> plat
Charles Hartman wrote:
> Does anyone know of a cross-platform (OSX and Windows at least) library
> for text-to-speech? I know there's an OSX API, and probably also for
> Windows. I know PyTTS exists, but it seems to talk only to the Windows
> engine. I'd like to write a s
Charles Hartman wrote:
Does anyone know of a cross-platform (OSX and Windows at least) library
for text-to-speech? I know there's an OSX API, and probably also for
Windows. I know PyTTS exists, but it seems to talk only to the Windows
engine. I'd like to write a single Python module
Does anyone know of a cross-platform (OSX and Windows at least) library
for text-to-speech? I know there's an OSX API, and probably also for
Windows. I know PyTTS exists, but it seems to talk only to the Windows
engine. I'd like to write a single Python module to handle this on both
Peter wrote:
I released a new version of the Windows installer for Python 2.3 that
includes the missing _TTSFast.pyd file.
Unfortunenately, the file TTSFast.py is missing, not _TTSFast.pyd.
Hans Georg
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http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list
I released a new version of the Windows installer for Python 2.3 that
includes the missing _TTSFast.pyd file.
Peter Hansen wrote:
> Mike P. wrote:
> > I was wondering if anyone has had any luck with the python text to
speech
> > (pyTTS) module available on Sourceforge:
> > h
Mike P. wrote:
Hi,
I was wondering if anyone has had any luck with the python text to speech
(pyTTS) module available on Sourceforge:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/uncassist
I have followed the tutorial for pyTTS at:
http://www.cs.unc.edu/~parente/tech/tr02.shtml
Using the first simple speech
Mike P. wrote:
Hi,
I was wondering if anyone has had any luck with the python text to speech
(pyTTS) module available on Sourceforge:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/uncassist
I have followed the tutorial for pyTTS at:
http://www.cs.unc.edu/~parente/tech/tr02.shtml
Using the first simple speech
Peter Hansen wrote:
Mike P. wrote:
I was wondering if anyone has had any luck with the python text to speech
(pyTTS) module available on Sourceforge:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/uncassist
I saw the following blog entry by Joey deVilla:
http://farm.tucows.com/blog/Platforms/Windows/_archives
Mike P. wrote:
I was wondering if anyone has had any luck with the python text to speech
(pyTTS) module available on Sourceforge:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/uncassist
I saw the following blog entry by Joey deVilla:
http://farm.tucows.com/blog/Platforms/Windows/_archives/2005/1/19/266813.html
Hi,
I was wondering if anyone has had any luck with the python text to speech
(pyTTS) module available on Sourceforge:
http://sourceforge.net/projects/uncassist
I have followed the tutorial for pyTTS at:
http://www.cs.unc.edu/~parente/tech/tr02.shtml
Using the first simple speech example
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