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I'm trying to create an artificially intelligent program (nothing really big or special) and I wanted it to have a voice (who wouldn't?). I've looked into espeak, festival, gTTS and they're nice and usable, but not realistic enough for me to really be proud of, if that makes sense. I've been looking for something more realistic. Like this

from gtts import gTTS

tts = gTTS(text='what to say', lang='en')
tts.save('/path/to/file.mp3')

gTTS works fine. I love it. It's realistic, but it requires Internet.. The issue is, I want my application to be as independent as possible. And I hate depending on Internet access.

Are there any other options?

PS: I'm currently running Linux, so your OS might have a different solution.

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  • If speech recognition would be so easy, it wouldn't need internet. Jan 25, 2018 at 8:38
  • A simple google search yielded this: pypi.python.org/pypi/pyttsx3/2.5
    – Isma
    Jan 25, 2018 at 8:40
  • That, my friend, is the answer I was dreading. The future can't come fast enough :(
    – Edgecase
    Jan 25, 2018 at 8:40
  • I'll try that, Isma. If it works out, I'll answer my own question. Thanks :)
    – Edgecase
    Jan 25, 2018 at 8:41
  • Unfortunately, Isma, pyttsx3 sounds like an exact replica of espeak. Which would be nice for porting it over to another computer, but not for realism. Thanks anyways
    – Edgecase
    Jan 25, 2018 at 8:45

1 Answer 1

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Try to use pyttsx3 2.5, according the documentation:

gTTS which works perfectly in python3 but it needs internet connection to work since it relies on google to get the audio data.But Pyttsx is completely offline and works seemlesly and has multiple tts-engine support.

Works for Python 2 and 3

To install it:

pip install pyttsx3

Using it should be as simple as:

import pyttsx3
engine = pyttsx3.init()
engine.say("I will speak this text")
engine.runAndWait()

Edit 1 - Changing the voice

To get a less robotic voice you can try to change the voice as follows:

engine.setProperty('voice', voice.id)

To get the available voices

voices = engine.getProperty('voices')

You can try the different available voices as explained in this question: Changing the voice with PYTTSX module in python.

Edit 2 - Selecting speech engine

The library supports the following engines:

  • sapi5 - SAPI5 on Windows
  • nsss - NSSpeechSynthesizer on Mac OS X
  • espeak - eSpeak on every other platform

If espeak is not very natural you can try sapi5 if you are on Windows or nsss if you are on Mac OS X.

You can specify the engine in the init method, e.g.:

pyttsx3.init(driverName='sapi5') 

More info here: http://pyttsx3.readthedocs.io/en/latest/engine.html

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  • I tested this and it works, but it sounds like an exact replica of espeak. It would be great for getting the voice to work on another computer that doesn't have espeak installed, but not for sounding realistic. I'm trying to find a voice that doesn't sound robotic. Or at least THAT robotic
    – Edgecase
    Jan 25, 2018 at 8:48
  • Did you try changing the voice? I edited my answer. Unfortunately there seems not to be too many alternatives in Python to do that. If you can move to c#, there are other solutions.
    – Isma
    Jan 25, 2018 at 8:51
  • I didn't even know you could change the voices with that module. Let me try it out
    – Edgecase
    Jan 25, 2018 at 8:51
  • Just tested it. And it doesn't work as expected. Instead of changing the quality of the voice, or even the gender, it changes the accent of the voice. It's a little humerus, some of them. But since it's not any less robotic, I won't mark this answer solved in the hopes that someone has a solution I'm looking for.
    – Edgecase
    Jan 25, 2018 at 8:59
  • 2
    The sapi5 engine would work if I was running Windows, but I'm running Linux unfortunately.
    – Edgecase
    Jan 25, 2018 at 9:12

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