speakup and programming code

Gregory Nowak gnowak1 at uic.edu
Sat Jan 12 11:15:35 EST 2002


Grate sugestion, but it wouldn't work for everything. For example, something like "printf" begines with a lowercase p, and ends with a lowercase f, which would mean that it wouldn't get broken up if I understand your implementation of it.
Greg


On Sat, Jan 12, 2002 at 07:25:28AM -0500, Charles Hallenbeck wrote:
> Recent posts by Thomas Ward and others have prompted this
> suggestion for a speakup feature that might greatly facilitate
> things for people who deal with program code such as C or C++,
> and might make exception dictionaries less critical to implement.
> 
> Many times the mixture of capitalization within an alphabetic
> string is unusual in program code, and of course it is important.
> I first ran across this many years ago with the name of the
> popular data base package "d base ii". Now what you should have
> heard inside the quotes is what everyone says when they pronounce
> it, but "d base" is actually written "dBASE", and I defy you to
> hear that correctly without spelling it out character by
> character.
> 
> Here is my suggestion: When speakup is sending a series of
> letters to the synth and notices that (1) the current char is
> upper case, and (2) the last char sent was lower case, then (3)
> before sending the current char it should send whatever is needed
> to break the current string into two parts. Maybe that would be a
> CR, or a space, or some unspoken control char, or whatever. The
> result would be "d base" instead of "dBASE", and C programmers
> will recognize immediately that there will be zillions of similar
> funny case mixtures that will be spoken more correctly if the
> transition from lower to upper case within a string is broken up
> with a neutral unspoken element that serves only to cause the
> synth to pronounce what it has already received and treat the
> following as a new word.
> 
> This would perhaps be an inexpensive speakup modification that
> would dramatically improve its performance for some of us.
> 
> Chuck
> 
> 
> *<<<=-=>>>*<<<=-=>>>*<<<=-=>>>*<<<=-=>>>*
> Visit me at http://www.mhonline.net/~chuckh
> The Moon is Waning Crescent (1% of Full)
> 
> 
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