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Speech Rule Engine

Build Status Dependencies devDependency Status Coverage Status

NodeJS version of the ChromeVox speech rule engine. Forked from ChromeVox release 1.31.0

The speech rule engine can translate XML expression into speech strings according to rules that can be specified in a syntax using Xpath expressions. It was originally designed for translation of MathML and MathJax DOM elements for the ChromeVox screen reader. Besides the rules originally designed for the use in ChromeVox, it also has an implemententation of the full set of Mathspeak rules. In addition it contains a library for semantic interpretation and enrichment of MathML expressions.

There are two ways of using this engine. Either as a package via npm or by building it as a standalone tool. The former is the easiest way to use the speech rule engine via its Api and is the preferred option if you just want to include it in your project. The latter is useful if you want to use the speech rule engine in batch mode or interactivley to add your own code.

Node Module

Install as a node module using npm:

 npm install speech-rule-engine

Then import into a running node or a source file using require:

 require('speech-rule-engine');

API

Current API functions are

 processExpression(mathml); 

Takes a string containing a MathML expression and returns the corresponding speech string.

 processFile(input, output);

Takes an input file containing a MathML expression and writes the corresponding speech string to the output file.

 setupEngine(options);

Takes an object of option/value pairs to parameterise the Speech Rule Engine. Valid options are:

Option Value
domain Domain or subject area of speech rules (e.g., mathspeak, physics).
style Style of speech rules (e.g., brief).
semantics Boolean flag to swich on semantic interpretation.

Observe that some speech rule domains only make sense with semantics switched on or off and that not every domain implements every style. See also the description of the command line parameters in the next section for more details.

Standalone Engine

Node dependencies you have to install:

 closure
 closurecompiler
 closure-library
 xmldom
 xpath
 commander

Using npm run

 npm install closure closurecompiler closure-library xmldom xpath commander

In version 1.43 of the closure library there is a mistake in the file

closure-library/closure/bin/build/jscompiler.py 

You might need to change

# Attempt 32-bit mode if we're <= Java 1.7
if java_version >= 1.7:
  args += ['-d32']

to

# Attempt 32-bit mode if we're <= Java 1.7
if java_version <= 1.7:
  args += ['-d32']

Build

Depending on your setup you might need to adapt the NODEJS and NODE_MODULES variable in the Makefile. Then simply run

make

This will make both the command line executable and the interactive load script.

Run on command line

bin/sre -i infile -o outfile

As an example run

bin/sre -i samples/sample1.xml -o sample1.txt

Run interactively

Import into a running node process

require('./lib/sre4node.js');

Note, that this will import the full functionality of the speech rule engine in the sre namespace and of the closure library in the goog namespace.

Command Line Options

The following is a list of command line options for the speech rule engine.

Short Long Meaning
-i --input [name] Input file [name]
-o --output [name] Output file [name].
If not given output is printed to stdout.
-d --domain [name] Domain or subject area [name].
This refers to a particular subject type of speech rules or subject area rules are defined for (e.g., mathspeak, physics).
If no domain parameter is provided, domain default is used.
-t --style [name] Speech style [name].
Selects a particular speech style (e.g., brief).
If no style parameter is provided, style default is used.
-s --semantics Switch on semantics interpretation.
Note, that some speech rule domains only make sense with semantics switched on or off.
-e --enumerate Enumerates all available domains and styles.
Note that not every style is implemented in every domain.
-v --verbose Verbose mode. Print additional information, useful for debugging.
-l --log [name] Log file [name]. Verbose output is redirected to this file.
If not given verbose output is printed to stdout.
-h --help output usage information
-V --version output the version number

Developers Notes

Build Options

Other make targets useful during development are:

make test

Runs all the tests using the Node's assert module. Output is pretty printed to stdout.

make lint

Runs the closure linter tool. To use this option, you need to install the appropriate node package with

npm install closure-linter-wrapper

To automatically fix some of linting errors run:

make fixjsstyle

Note, that all JavaScript code in this repository is fully linted and compiles error free with respect to the strictest possible closure compiler settings.

When creating a pull request, please make sure that your code compiles and is fully linted.

Node Package

The speech rule engine is published as a node package in fully compiled form, together with the JSON libraries for translating atomic expressions. All relevant files are in the lib subdirectory.

To publish the node package run

npm publish

This first builds the package by executing

make publish

This make command is also useful for local testing of the package.