Say — Text-to-Speech Command in OSX
The text-to-speech function in Mac OSX works in command line too.
A simple say
command with a string provided:
$ say "Thank you for calling us. We are currently unavailable to take your call. Please leave us a message and we'll return your call as soon as possible."
We can control the speaking rate in words per minute:
$ say "Thank you for calling us. We are currently unavailable to take your call. Please leave us a message and we'll return your call as soon as possible." -r 180
We can export the speech audio into file:
$ say "Thank you for calling us. We are currently unavailable to take your call. Please leave us a message and we'll return your call as soon as possible." -r 180 -o ~/Desktop/voice-message-en.aiff
We can provide an input file instead of using the string parameter:
$ say -f voice-message.txt
We can specific which voice to use. And specifying “?” lists all the voice options:
$ say -v '?'
For instance, I can have a Cantonese text-to-speech with the voice “Sin-Ji”:
$ say -f voice-message.txt -v "Sin-ji" -r 70
Published on 2015-09-25.
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