Changing system('say') command values

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william
william on 2 Apr 2014
Answered: Carlos Gonzalez on 1 Apr 2019
Making MATLAB to speak on a Mac can be done with system('say hello world') but how to modify the existing system('say') function values? how to specify the system voice name and speak the text from a file or a variable?
Does anybody have tried and succeeded for Chinese? system('say 你好')

Answers (2)

Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 2 Apr 2014
system('say -v VoiceNameHere -f FileNameHere')
  3 Comments
Walter Roberson
Walter Roberson on 8 Apr 2014
str = char([20320 22909]);
system( sprintf('say -v VoiceNameHere %s', str) )
My expectation would be that that will fail, considering the error message you saw. To get the UTF-8 using a file:
fid = fopen('FileNameHere', 'w', 'UTF-8');
fwrite(fid, char([20320 22909]), 'char');
fclose(fid);
and then the system() I showed above.
Why did I use [20320 22909] ? I looked up the characters at http://www.khngai.com/chinese/tools/codechar.php?code=%E5%A5%BD
With my Mac and MATLAB set up the way it is at the moment, I am not able to copy-and-paste the Chinese characters from another window into a MATLAB string. I am not certain if that could be changed.
william
william on 9 Apr 2014
Edited: william on 9 Apr 2014
Thank you for your comment,,,I was able to perform this with the following script
feature('DefaultCharacterSet', 'UTF-8')%twice
str = char([20320 22909]);
system( sprintf('say -v Mei %s', str) ) %Taiwanese voice
system( sprintf('say -v Ting %s', str) ) %Main land China voice

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Carlos Gonzalez
Carlos Gonzalez on 1 Apr 2019
myString = "hello world";
command = strcat('say',{' '},myString);
system(command)
Where myString is the text you wish for your mac to speak.

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