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Re: [Emacspeak] TTS Server Implementation Questions



You are overlooking one critical component which explains why adding
indxing support is a non-trivial exercise which would require a complete
redesign of the existing TTS interface model.

For indexing information to be of any use, it has to be fed back into the
client and used by the client. For example, tell the client to
update/move the cursor to the last position spoken.

There is absolutely no support for this data to be fed back into the
current system. The current TTS interface has data flowing in only one
direction, from emacs to emacpseak and from emacspeak to the TTS server
and form the tts server to the tts synthesizer. There is no existing
mechanism to feed information (i.e. index positions) back from the TTS
engine to emacs. While getting this information from the TTS engine into
the TTS server is probably reasonably easy, there is no existing channel
to feed that information up into Emacspeak. 

Not only would it be necessary to define and implement a whole new model
to incorporate this feedback, in addition to also working with TTS
engines which do not provide indexing information, you would also likely
need to implement some sort of multi speech cursor tracking so that the
system can track cursor positions in different buffers.

The reason this sort of functionality seems easy in systems like speakup
or speech-dispatcher is because those systems were designed with this
functionality. It is incprporated into the base design and part of the
various communication protocols the design implement. Adding this
functionality is not something which can just be 'tacked on'. 

The good news of course is that being open source, anyone can go ahead
and define a new interface model and add indexing capability. However,
it may be worth considering that it has taken 30 years of development to
get the current model to where it is at, so I think you can expect a
pretty steep climb initially!

John Covici <covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:

> Its a lot simpler -- indexing is supposed to simply arrange things so
> that when reading a buffer, and you stop reading, the cursor will be
> at or near the point where you stopped.  Speakup has had this for a
> long time and that is why I use it on Linux.  But its only good for
> the virtual console.  Now speech dispatcher has indexinng built in, so
> if you connect to that and use one of the supported synthesizers,
> indexing works correctly and I don't see any performance hit.  I think
> all the client has to do is connect to speech dispatcher, but check me
> on this.
>
> On Mon, 08 Apr 2024 08:25:27 -0400,
> Robert Melton wrote:
>> 
>> Is indexing supposed to be like per reading block, or like one global?  Is the idea 
>> that you can be reading a buffer, go to another buffer, read some of it, then come 
>> back and continue? IE: Index per "reading block"? 
>> 
>> Assuming it is global for simplicity, it is still a heavy lift for implementation on 
>> Mac and Windows. 
>> 
>> As they do not natively report back as words are spoken, now
>> you can get this behavior at an "Utterance" level, by installing hooks and callbacks 
>> and tracking those. With that you would need to additionally keep copies of the future 
>> utterances, even if they already where queued with the TTS.
>> 
>> Considered from the POV of index per reading block, then you need to find ways to ident 
>> each one and its position and index them and continue reading.
>> 
>> Sounds neat, but at least for my servers, right now, the juice isn't worth the sqeeze, I
>> am still trying to get basic stuff like pitch multipliers working on windows via wave 
>> mangling and other basic features, hehe. 
>> 
>> > On Apr 8, 2024, at 05:20, Parham Doustdar <parham90@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> > 
>> > I understand. My question isn't whether it's possible though, or how difficult it
>> > would be, or the steps we'd have to take to implement it.
>> > My question is more about whether the use cases we have today make it worth it to
>> > reconsider. All other questions we can apply the wisdom of the community to solve, if
>> > we were convinced that the effort would be worth it.
>> > For me, the way I've got around this is to use the next/previous paragraph
>> > commands. The chunks are good small enough that I can "zoom in" if I want, and yet
>> > large enough that I don't have to constantly hit next-line.
>> > Sent from my iPhone
>> > 
>> >> On 8 Apr 2024, at 11:13, Tim Cross <theophilusx@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >> 
>> >> 
>> >> This is extremely unlikely to be implemented. It is non-trivial and
>> >> would require a significant re-design of the whole interface and model
>> >> of operation. It isn't as simple as just getting index information from
>> >> the TTS servers which support it. That information has to then be fed
>> >> backwards to Emacs through some mechanism which currently does not
>> >> exist and would result in a far more complicated interface/model.
>> >> 
>> >> As Raman said, the decision not to have this was not simply an oversight
>> >> or due to lack of time. It was a conscious design decision. What your
>> >> asking for isn't simply an enhancement, it is a complete redesign of the
>> >> TTS interface model.
>> >> 
>> >> "Parham Doustdar" (via emacspeak Mailing List) <emacspeak@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
>> >> 
>> >>> I agree. I'm not sure which TTS engines support it. Maybe, just like notification streams
>> >>> are supported in some servers, we can implement this feature for engines that support it?
>> >>> Sent from my iPhone
>> >>> 
>> >>>>> On 8 Apr 2024, at 10:24, John Covici <emacspeak@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >>>> 
>> >>>> I know this might be contraversial, but, indexing would be very useful
>> >>>> to me,  sometimes I read long buffers and when I stop the reading, the
>> >>>> cursor is still where I started, so no real  way to do this adequately
>> >>>> -- I would not mind if it were just down to the line, rather than
>> >>>> individual words, but it would make emacspeak lots nicer for me.
>> >>>> 
>> >>>>> On Fri, 05 Apr 2024 15:39:15 -0400,
>> >>>>> "T.V Raman" (via emacspeak Mailing List) wrote:
>> >>>>> 
>> >>>>> [1  <text/plain; us-ascii (7bit)>]
>> >>>>> as a single call is that it ensures  atomicity i.e. all of the state
>> >>>>> gets set at one shot from the perspective of the elisp layer, so you
>> >>>>> hopefully never get TTS that has its state  partially set.
>> >>>>> note that the other primary benefit of tts_sync_state
>> >>>>> 
>> >>>>> Robert Melton writes:
>> >>>>>> On threading. It is all concurrent, lots of fun protecting of the state.
>> >>>>>> 
>> >>>>>> On language and voice, I was thinking of them as a tree, language/voice,
>> >>>>>> as this is how Windows and MacOS seem to provide them.
>> >>>>>> 
>> >>>>>> ----
>> >>>>>> 
>> >>>>>> Oh, one last thing. Should TTS Server implementations be returning a \n
>> >>>>>> after command is complete, or is just returning nothing acceptable?
>> >>>>>> 
>> >>>>>> 
>> >>>>>>> On Apr 5, 2024, at 14:01, T.V Raman <raman@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >>>>>>> 
>> >>>>>>> And do spend some time thinking of atomicity and multithreaded systems,
>> >>>>>>> e.g. ask yourself the question "how many threads of execution are active
>> >>>>>>> at any given time"; Hint: the answer isn't as simple as "just one
>> >>>>>>> because my server doesn't use threads". > Raman--
>> >>>>>>>> 
>> >>>>>>>> Thanks so much, that clarifies a bunch. A few questions on the
>> >>>>>>>> language / voice support.
>> >>>>>>>> 
>> >>>>>>>> Does the TTS server maintain an internal list and switch through
>> >>>>>>>> it or does it send the list the lisp in a way I have missed?
>> >>>>>>>> 
>> >>>>>>>> Would it be useful to have a similar feature for voices, being
>> >>>>>>>> first you pick right language, then you pick preferred voice
>> >>>>>>>> then maybe it is stored in a defcustom and sent next time as
>> >>>>>>>> (set_lang lang:voice t)
>> >>>>>>>> 
>> >>>>>>>> 
>> >>>>>>>>> On Apr 5, 2024, at 13:10, T.V Raman <raman@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>> >>>>>>>>> 
>> >>>>>>>>> If your TTS supports more than one language, the TTS API exposes these
>> >>>>>>>>> as a list; these calls loop through the list (dectalk,espeak, outloud)
>> >>>>>>>> 
>> >>>>>>>> --
>> >>>>>>>> Robert "robertmeta" Melton
>> >>>>>>>> lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> >>>>>>>> 
>> >>>>>>> 
>> >>>>>> 
>> >>>>>> --
>> >>>>>> Robert "robertmeta" Melton
>> >>>>>> lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> >>>>> 
>> >>>>> --
>> >>>>> [2  <text/plain; UTF-8 (8bit)>]
>> >>>>> Emacspeak discussion list -- emacspeak@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> >>>>> To unsubscribe send email to:
>> >>>>> emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with a subject of: unsubscribe
>> >>>> 
>> >>>> --
>> >>>> Your life is like a penny.  You're going to lose it.  The question is:
>> >>>> How do
>> >>>> you spend it?
>> >>>> 
>> >>>>       John Covici wb2una
>> >>>>       covici@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> >>>> Emacspeak discussion list -- emacspeak@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> >>>> To unsubscribe send email to:
>> >>>> emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with a subject of: unsubscribe
>> >>> 
>> >>> Emacspeak discussion list -- emacspeak@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> >>> To unsubscribe send email to:
>> >>> emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with a subject of: unsubscribe
>> 
>> --
>> Robert "robertmeta" Melton
>> lists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>> 
>> 


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