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I am trying to convert a string into audio stream to play the string content. Code is below.

public void generateSound() {
    try {

        String audioString = "hello";
        AudioInputStream inputStream=null;
        ByteArrayOutputStream byt = new ByteArrayOutputStream();
        byt.write(audioString.getBytes());
        AudioFormat format = new AudioFormat(44100, 16, 1, false, true);
        Clip clip = AudioSystem.getClip();
        InputStream input = new ByteArrayInputStream(byt.toByteArray());
        AudioInputStream ais =new AudioInputStream(input, format, byt.toByteArray().length / format.getFrameSize());
        clip.open(inputStream);
        clip.start(); 
    } catch (Exception e) {
    }
}

I don't know whether this is correct or not. If not what is the possible way to play the string content?

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1 Answer 1

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Certainly not like that - but it sounds like you want a Java Speech implementation, like this one (FreeTTS).

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  • We can achieve this by TTS but i dont wanna add extra jar files to my application because already too many jar files were added so my TL is not willing to accept this TTS solution. can you give me some points to play string content using javax.sound.sampled packake. it would more worthful to me thank you. Dec 8, 2011 at 5:01
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    @user1023877: Assuming you really want text to speech support, and you don't want to write it yourself, there is no alternative. Java Sound simply doesn't support it as a feature, and I wouldn't really expect it to. (Of course this is assuming that you really do want text to speech. You haven't really said what you mean by "play string content.")
    – Jon Skeet
    Dec 8, 2011 at 5:09
  • Hi Jon Skeet. i found 2 ways to generate sound. 1.java itself support .wav and .au fomats so we need to write the string value to .wav file and then play it. ** for this Could you give me some points on it**. 2. We need to add FreeTTs libraries as you recommend. ** Could you tell me procedure for how to add these libraries**. Dec 12, 2011 at 6:27
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    @user1023877: You don't just "write a string value to a .wav file" - you need something to "understand" how the text should sound, which is exactly what the TTS library would do. As for the "procedure for how to add these libraries" - I don't know what kind of application you're writing, or anything about it. However, the FreeTTS documentation section on "downloading and installing" seems pretty good, and there's a Quick Start section too.
    – Jon Skeet
    Dec 12, 2011 at 6:31
  • IDE is Netbeans and application file is EAR (EJB + WAR) framework is jsf 1.2 Dec 12, 2011 at 6:38

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