On 23.05.2009 at 23:01:54 Michael Whapples <mwhapp...@aim.com> wrote:
> Hello, > This is in response to an email by Hermann, I am not doing it as a reply > as I get messages as a digest and lost the original message. > > First thing to note is that speakup as far as I know has its own > character table which it uses for pronouncing characters when saying > individual characters (eg. spelling, cursoring over characters, etc). > This table can be found in /sys/modules/speakup/parameters/characters > and so can be edited there. Did you test this on a GRML machine? This path does not exist. Remember that Speakup is set up in a different way on GRML: Start with swspeak instead of adding a specific Speakup module to /etc/modules. > Speakup by default lists characters up to > value 255, although values beyond 127 depend on the encoding used (eg. > latin1, utf-8, etc) for the actual definition. GRML is based on unicode and so should Speakup. Perhaps this is the problem? > As far as I know espeakup > doesn't modify this table, speechd-up can replace the tables or leave > them alone (there is an option for speechd-up to specify this). > Speechd-up relies on the settings of Speech-dispatcher, so it works in most cases, except the ones I discribed. > One way to fix this is to create a script to modify the table or copy a > new table into /sys/modules/speakup/parameters/characters and to do this > on start up. > How could such a script look like? I'm not a scripter, and how can this be implemented into the startup procedure? > Does this help? > Sorry, not really at the moment. Hermann _______________________________________________ Grml mailing list - Grml@mur.at http://lists.mur.at/mailman/listinfo/grml join #grml on irc.freenode.org grml-devel-blog: http://grml.supersized.org/