Annotation of researchv10dc/dist/man/v4/manx/unspk.8, revision 1.1.1.1

1.1       root        1: .pa 1
                      2: .he 'UNSPK (VIII)'4/13/73'UNSPK (VIII)'
                      3: .ti 0
                      4: NAME           unspk -- decode voice synthesizer text
                      5: .sp
                      6: .ti 0
                      7: SYNOPSIS       unspk_____ [ -_ ] [ input [ output ] ]
                      8: .sp
                      9: .ti 0
                     10: DESCRIPTION    unspk_____
                     11: is inverse to 
                     12: .ul
                     13: speak.
                     14: It translates coded voice synthesizer input, as created by 
                     15: .ul
                     16: speak,
                     17: into phonetic strings
                     18: of the sort accepted by 
                     19: .ul
                     20: speak.
                     21: Standard output or input is assumed when one or the other
                     22: is unspecified.
                     23: .sp
                     24: The -_ option produces output in a different phonetic code
                     25: for another vocal tract synthesizer [C. H. Coker,
                     26: Speech synthesis by modelling the human articulatory
                     27: system, MM69-1232-29].
                     28: .sp
                     29: unspk_____ lives in /crp/vs
                     30: .sp
                     31: .ti 0
                     32: FILES          --
                     33: .sp
                     34: .ti 0
                     35: SEE ALSO       speak(I), vsp(VII)
                     36: .sp
                     37: .ti 0
                     38: DIAGNOSTICS    "Input file." -- can't open it
                     39: .br
                     40: "Output file." -- can't create it
                     41: .sp
                     42: .ti 0
                     43: BUGS           --

unix.superglobalmegacorp.com

This archive runs on limited infrastructure. Preserving old code on modern bandwidth. Automated agents are requested to crawl responsibly.