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When I use a range in my web page, for example "4 - 6" or "4 to 6", VoiceOver reads it out as something that sounds like "4 simmul 6" and I don't know why.

Originally, I assumed it was something to do with the dash. But I added an aria-label to put in the word "to" and it still reads it out incorrectly.

I've also tried doing it with something other than numbers, for example "point to point", and it reads it out correctly.

CodePen example here: https://codepen.io/xmeltrut/pen/PXRwvP

<p>8 to 4 MB/s</p>
<p>Point to point</p>

Turn on VoiceOver (F5) and scroll through the two paragraphs. The bottom one works, the top one is weird.

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  • In what way is the top example on CodePen weird? For me, it reads "8 to 4 MB/s" as "eight to four megabytes slash s", which sounds all right? Jan 4, 2019 at 14:43
  • Might be a certain combination of browser / OS? Quality isn't good, but here is what it is doing on all computers in our office: youtu.be/cHAoRSBZ6ek Jan 4, 2019 at 15:01
  • Could you check whether it has something to do with the dictionary or other settings in VoiceOver?
    – Tsundoku
    Jan 4, 2019 at 18:22
  • VO on iOS seems to work ok. I don't have a Mac to test it there. What does the "closed caption" for VO say? Does it show "4 to 8MB/s" but it says "simul" for "to"? I can kind of hear that on youtube. What if you change the voice? Jan 4, 2019 at 18:48
  • Talkback (Android 8, latest Chrome) reads the codepen example as "four to eight megabytes per second". It even gets the units (and even slash as "per") right! Jan 4, 2019 at 20:30

1 Answer 1

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This seems to be a bug with the default voice on Mac, Daniel Compact. Changing to to Daniel, Kate or Kate Compact makes the issue go away.

You can change it by:

  1. Open System Preferences
  2. Select Accessibility
  3. Select VoiceOver, and then "Open VoiceOver Utility"
  4. Select Speech
  5. Use the drop-down in the Voice column
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  • yes, that's what i suggested in my comment from jan 4, 2019 Jan 30, 2019 at 21:01

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