Reputation: 1480
Is there a way to use the MS Speech utility from command line? I can do it on a mac, but can't find any reference to it on Windows XP.
Upvotes: 46
Views: 87997
Reputation: 3491
My 2 cents on the topic, command line one-liners:
on Win8+ (WinXP) using PowerShell.exe
PowerShell -Command "Add-Type –AssemblyName System.Speech; (New-Object System.Speech.Synthesis.SpeechSynthesizer).Speak('hello');"
on Win using mshta.exe
(might not be available in corp. env.)
mshta vbscript:Execute("CreateObject(""SAPI.SpVoice"").Speak(""Hello"")(window.close)")
on OSX using say
say "hello"
Ubuntu Desktop (>=2015) using native spd-say
spd-say "hello"
on any other Linux
/usr/bin/mplayer -ao alsa -really-quiet -noconsolecontrols "http://translate.google.com/translate_tts?ie=UTF-8&client=tw-ob&q=Hello%20World&tl=en"
;on Raspberry Pi, Win, OSX (or any remote) using Node-Red
Upvotes: 79
Reputation: 51
There's also Balabolka: http://www.cross-plus-a.com/bconsole.htm
It has a command line tool balcon.exe
. You can use it like this:
List voices:
balcon.exe -l
Speak file:
balcon.exe -n "IVONA 2 Jennifer" -f file.txt
Speak from the command-line:
balcon.exe -n "IVONA 2 Jennifer" -t "hello there"
More command line options are available. I tried it on Ubuntu with SAPI5 installed in Wine. It works just fine.
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 6561
There is a powershell way also:
Create a file called speak.ps1
param([string]$inputText)
Add-Type –AssemblyName System.Speech
$synth = New-Object System.Speech.Synthesis.SpeechSynthesizer
$synth.Speak($inputText);
Then you can call it
.\speak.ps1 "I'm sorry Dave, I'm afraid I can't do that"
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 22443
If you can't find a command you can always wrap the System.Speech.Synthesis.SpeechSynthesizer from .Net 3.0 (Don't forget to reference "System.Speech")
using System.Speech.Synthesis;
namespace Talk
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
using (var ss = new SpeechSynthesizer())
foreach (var toSay in args)
ss.Speak(toSay);
}
}
}
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 31
rem The user decides what to convert here
:input
cls
echo Type in what you want the computer to say and then press the enter key.
echo.
set /p text=
rem Making the temp file
:num
set num=%random%
if exist temp%num%.vbs goto num
echo ' > "temp%num%.vbs"
echo set speech = Wscript.CreateObject("SAPI.spVoice") >> "temp%num%.vbs"
echo speech.speak "%text%" >> "temp%num%.vbs"
start temp%num%.vbs
pause
del temp%num%.vbs
goto input
pause
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 6802
There's a nice open source program that does what you're asking for on Windows called Peter's Text to Speech available here: http://jampal.sourceforge.net/ptts.html
It contains a binary called ptts.exe that will speak text from standard input, so you can run it like this:
echo hello there | ptts.exe
Alternatively, you could use the following three line VBS script to get similar basic TTS:
'say.vbs
set s = CreateObject("SAPI.SpVoice")
s.Speak Wscript.Arguments(0), 3
s.WaitUntilDone(1000)
And you could invoke that from the command line like this:
cscript say.vbs "hello there"
If you go the script route, you'll probably want to find some more extensive code examples with a variable timeout and error handling.
Hope it helps.
Upvotes: 25
Reputation: 7615
Your best approach is to write a small command line utility that will do it for you. It would not be a lot of work - just read text in and then use the ms tts library.
Another alternative is to use Cepstral. It comes with a nice command line utility and sounds light years better than the ms tts.
Upvotes: 2