C-e dv in emacspeak should turn off voice lock.
>>>>> "Littlefield," == Littlefield, Tyler <tyler@xxxxxxxxxxx> writes:
Littlefield,> Awesome, thanks for the info. I'll check both
Littlefield,> of those out. On 9/27/2012 5:05 PM, Tim Cross
Littlefield,> wrote:
>> A possible quick fix would be to turn off font-locking in
>> that mode. Emacspeak uses the font-lock text properties to
>> apply voice locking, so this should mean everything will
>> just be spoken in a normal voice.
>>
>> The 'long-term' or correct fix would probably be to tweak
>> the voice settings for the particular speech server you
>> are using. This will depend on which server you have, but
>> essentially you would need to tweak the voice setting for
>> the voice you find hard to hear or understand. Look at the
>> acss-structure.el file and the *-voices.el file to get an
>> idea. The emacs-wizards-generate-voice-sampler and
>> emacspeak-wizards-voice-sampler may help in identifying
>> the voices and hearing what different parameters do. IIt
>> is likely you will be able to set a new value for the
>> voice via the emacspeak customization buffers - look under
>> the tts group for the voice stuff. You just need to
>> identify which voice you need to change and then what to
>> change it to so that it is distinct and you can hear and
>> understand it when used.
>>
>> Tim
>>
>> On 28 September 2012 08:07, Littlefield, Tyler
>> <tyler@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
>>> Hello all: I had a quick question. I've looked through a
>>> few info pages already, but I'm not seeing what I
>>> want--perhaps I'm looking in the wrong place? I'm editing
>>> some cpp code, and for whatever reason, emacspeak keeps
>>> getting really deep and quiet when it reads the return
>>> type of a function as well in some other places. Is there
>>> a way to turn that off? I just want it to read the code
>>> to me. A solution to turning it off/a pointer to the
>>> correct info node would be appreciated. Thanks,
>>>
>>> --
>>> Take care, Ty http://tds-solutions.net The aspen project:
>>> a barebones light-weight mud engine:
>>> http://code.google.com/p/aspenmud He that will not reason
>>> is a bigot; he that cannot reason is a fool; he that
>>> dares not reason is a slave.
>>>
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>>> To unsubscribe from the emacspeak list or change your
>>> address on the emacspeak list send mail to
>>> "emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxx" with a subject of
>>> "unsubscribe" or "help".
>>>
>>
>>
Littlefield,>
Littlefield,>
Littlefield,> -- Take care, Ty http://tds-solutions.net The
Littlefield,> aspen project: a barebones light-weight mud
Littlefield,> engine: http://code.google.com/p/aspenmud He
Littlefield,> that will not reason is a bigot; he that cannot
Littlefield,> reason is a fool; he that dares not reason is a
Littlefield,> slave.
Littlefield,>
Littlefield,> -----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Littlefield,> To unsubscribe from the emacspeak list or
Littlefield,> change your address on the emacspeak list send
Littlefield,> mail to "emacspeak-request@xxxxxxxxxxx" with
Littlefield,> a subject of "unsubscribe" or "help".
--
Best Regards,
--raman
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