Android speech recognition and text to speech made easy
compile 'net.gotev:speech:1.3.1'
To start using the library, you have to initialize it in your Activity
public class YourActivity extends Activity {
Override
protected void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) {
super.onCreate(savedInstanceState);
setContentView(R.layout.your_layout);
Speech.init(this, getPackageName());
}
@Override
protected void onDestroy() {
// prevent memory leaks when activity is destroyed
Speech.getInstance().shutdown();
}
}
By default the library logging is disabled. You can enable debug log by invoking:
Logger.setLogLevel(LogLevel.DEBUG);
wherever you want in your code. You can adjust the level of detail from DEBUG to OFF.
The library logger uses android.util.Log
by default, so you will get the output in LogCat
. If you want to redirect logs to different output or use a different logger, you can provide your own delegate implementation like this:
Logger.setLoggerDelegate(new Logger.LoggerDelegate() {
@Override
public void error(String tag, String message) {
//your own implementation here
}
@Override
public void error(String tag, String message, Throwable exception) {
//your own implementation here
}
@Override
public void debug(String tag, String message) {
//your own implementation here
}
@Override
public void info(String tag, String message) {
//your own implementation here
}
});
You can find a fully working demo app which uses this library in the examples
directory. Just checkout the project and give it a try.
Inside an activity:
try {
// you must have android.permission.RECORD_AUDIO granted at this point
Speech.getInstance().startListening(new SpeechDelegate() {
@Override
public void onStartOfSpeech() {
Log.i("speech", "speech recognition is now active");
}
@Override
public void onSpeechRmsChanged(float value) {
Log.d("speech", "rms is now: " + value);
}
@Override
public void onSpeechPartialResults(List<String> results) {
StringBuilder str = new StringBuilder();
for (String res : results) {
str.append(res).append(" ");
}
Log.i("speech", "partial result: " + str.toString().trim());
}
@Override
public void onSpeechResult(String result) {
Log.i("speech", "result: " + result);
}
});
} catch (SpeechRecognitionNotAvailable exc) {
Log.e("speech", "Speech recognition is not available on this device!");
// You can prompt the user if he wants to install Google App to have
// speech recognition, and then you can simply call:
//
// SpeechUtil.redirectUserToGoogleAppOnPlayStore(this);
//
// to redirect the user to the Google App page on Play Store
} catch (GoogleVoiceTypingDisabledException exc) {
Log.e("speech", "Google voice typing must be enabled!");
}
In your Activity's onDestroy
, add:
@Override
protected void onDestroy() {
Speech.getInstance().shutdown();
}
To prevent memory leaks.
Add this to your layout:
<LinearLayout
android:orientation="vertical"
android:layout_width="wrap_content"
android:layout_height="wrap_content"
android:id="@+id/linearLayout">
<net.gotev.speech.ui.SpeechProgressView
android:id="@+id/progress"
android:layout_width="120dp"
android:layout_height="150dp"/>
</LinearLayout>
It's important that the SpeechProgressView
is always inside a LinearLayout to function properly. You can adjust width and height accordingly to the bar height settings (see below).
then, when you start speech recognition, pass also the SpeechProgressView
:
Speech.getInstance().startListening(speechProgressView, speechDelegate);
You can set all the 5 bar colors as you wish. This is just an example:
int[] colors = {
ContextCompat.getColor(this, android.R.color.black),
ContextCompat.getColor(this, android.R.color.darker_gray),
ContextCompat.getColor(this, android.R.color.black),
ContextCompat.getColor(this, android.R.color.holo_orange_dark),
ContextCompat.getColor(this, android.R.color.holo_red_dark)
};
speechProgressView.setColors(colors);
int[] heights = {60, 76, 58, 80, 55};
speechProgressView.setBarMaxHeightsInDp(heights);
Inside an activity:
Speech.getInstance().say("say something");
You can also provide a callback to receive status:
Speech.getInstance().say("say something", new TextToSpeechCallback() {
@Override
public void onStart() {
Log.i("speech", "speech started");
}
@Override
public void onCompleted() {
Log.i("speech", "speech completed");
}
@Override
public void onError() {
Log.i("speech", "speech error");
}
});
You can configure various parameters by using the setter methods on the speech instance, which you can get like this anywhere in your code:
Speech.getInstance()
Refer to JavaDocs for a complete reference.
Thanks to @zagum for the original implementation of the speech recognition view.
Copyright (C) 2017 Aleksandar Gotev
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
Thanks to Kristiyan Petrov for code review, bug fixes and library improvement ideas.