This is a read-only archive of the old Scratch 1.x Forums.
Try searching the current Scratch discussion forums.

#1 2011-06-10 17:22:14

luigiman64
Scratcher
Registered: 2011-04-02
Posts: 100+

a "speak" block

its a block like the say block but only the sprite aculally says what you typed its better then those speach bubbles and people who dont have mics can use them....
ypu can slect what type of voice and everything as well.


click on me IMA LUIGI IMA #1

Offline

 

#2 2011-06-10 17:40:37

technoguyx
Scratcher
Registered: 2008-10-18
Posts: 1000+

Re: a "speak" block

Too hard to make, and even if it were done it'll sound to robotic. Look at Microsoft Sam or similar programs, they don't sound realistic at all.


http://getgnulinux.org/links/en/linuxliberated_4_78x116.png

Offline

 

#3 2011-06-10 17:54:12

nuckelavee
Scratcher
Registered: 2011-05-18
Posts: 79

Re: a "speak" block

I'm trying to make a Scratch project that does that, but it can't recognize "TH" as a seperate sound.


Scratch 2.0- announced April 19, 2010, and now in alpha!  It looks cool, and finally has cloning  smile  Yay.

Offline

 

#4 2011-06-10 18:56:24

hmnwilson
Scratcher
Registered: 2007-07-04
Posts: 1000+

Re: a "speak" block

It's hard enough for people at Microsoft to make text-to-speech programs. There are just too many inconsistencies between English spelling/pronounciation for a small team to accomplish it, not to mention how all languages have different spelling rules to account for.

Don't get me wrong... I don't want to sound critical; I'm just saying that it couldn't happen.


I'm taking a break from Scratch until 2.0 comes out. Any messages sent between then and now probably won't be read - sorry.
(Oct. 20, 2011)

Offline

 

#5 2011-06-10 19:42:54

CloneCommando1
Scratcher
Registered: 2010-12-02
Posts: 500+

Re: a "speak" block

This would be really neat, but I think it would be to hard to implement. Not to mention, what would it do if there was a word it didn't recognize? Or if there was a typo, then what would it do?


RANDOM THOUGHT: If the tomato is a fruit, doesn't that make ketchup a smoothie?

Offline

 

#6 2011-06-10 20:28:49

luigiman64
Scratcher
Registered: 2011-04-02
Posts: 100+

Re: a "speak" block

technoguyx wrote:

Too hard to make, and even if it were done it'll sound to robotic. Look at Microsoft Sam or similar programs, they don't sound realistic at all.

yes thats could be true but it could be a good strt  it getts annoying with the speech buubles and making it so that people can read it...if it sounds robotic...eventually you never know they could make it sound more human-like


click on me IMA LUIGI IMA #1

Offline

 

#7 2011-06-10 20:38:53

luigiman64
Scratcher
Registered: 2011-04-02
Posts: 100+

Re: a "speak" block

CloneCommando1 wrote:

This would be really neat, but I think it would be to hard to implement. Not to mention, what would it do if there was a word it didn't recognize? Or if there was a typo, then what would it do?

yes that is true and i would take a while for it to make and to make it work is a whole other thing.....but to have a block like that would make things a lot easier for most scratchers....anyway this just a suggestions   roll


click on me IMA LUIGI IMA #1

Offline

 

#8 2011-07-30 16:18:52

joefarebrother
Scratcher
Registered: 2011-04-08
Posts: 1000+

Re: a "speak" block

I know: You could "train" it; you type something in ans try it but it doesn't work so you right click, select train, and you can speak into your mic and the next time you put in that text, it will say exactly what you said! It should also at least know how to say numbers.


My latest project is called http://tinyurl.com/d2m8hne! It has http://tinyurl.com/d395ygk views, http://tinyurl.com/cnasmt7 love-its, and http://tinyurl.com/bwjy8xs comments.
http://tinyurl.com/756anbk   http://tinyurl.com/iplaychess

Offline

 

#9 2011-07-30 16:39:04

LS97
Scratcher
Registered: 2009-06-14
Posts: 1000+

Re: a "speak" block

If it's not a variable output, you can always record it beforehand and the play the sound when needed. Otherwise, it would be pretty neat.

Offline

 

#10 2011-07-30 17:13:32

a1130
Scratcher
Registered: 2009-08-27
Posts: 500+

Re: a "speak" block

MIT doesn't have to make the speech engine. They can have Scratch support an existing speech engine, like L&H TruVoice (probably too unnatural though), AT&T Labs Natural Voices (obviously natural), IVONA (very natural and human-like, though expensive), or Cepstral (natural, better than AT&T but not as good as IVONA).

Offline

 

Board footer