1.0.3 • Published 6 years ago

simple-speech-recognition v1.0.3

Weekly downloads
5
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
6 years ago

simple-speech-recognition

Why make it complicated if it can be simple? This small library abstracts away all those nitty-gritty details you have to pay attention to when using the browser-integrated SpeechRecognition, and lets you focus on what's important: your own code.

Speech Recognition

Speech recognition is an experimental technology, which is currently being implemented in Browsers (at the time of writing, Chrome is the only one to fully support this).

With this technology you can put in texts into your computer using voice: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/SpeechRecognition

This library is a wrapper around the in-browser API. It "fixes" some of the quirky behaviour I've encountered and makes it more simple to be used.

Installation

Install this package using npm or yarn:

npm install simple-speech-recognition
yarn add simple-speech-recognition

Usage

Import the SpeechRecognizer class:

import SpeechRecognizer from 'simple-speech-recognition'

Create one (or more!) instance from the imported class:

const speechRecognizer = new SpeechRecognizer(options)

options can consist of the following fields:

const options = {
    SpeechRecognition: window.SpeechRecognition || window.webkitSpeechRecognition || DummySpeechRecognition,
    timeout: 1000, // The timeout until a speech recognition is completed (after the user has spoken their last word)
    resetCallback, // Callback used whenever an error happens
    resultCallback, // Callback used for results
    lang: 'en-US', // Language set on the Speech Recognition object
    interimResults: true // Whether you want to receive interim results or not
}

Simply pass an object with any fields you want to override.

The resultCallback receives the following message:

{
    transcript: 'Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet', // The recognized words
    finished: false // Whether the received message is the last one in the current recognition cycle
}

You won't receive any messages with finished: false if you passed interimResults: false to the constructor.

Example

Here is a simple example, which will log speech recognition results to the console:

import SpeechRecognizer from 'simple-speech-recognition'

const speechRecognizer = new SpeechRecognizer({
    resultCallback: ({ transcript, finished }) => console.log(transcript)
})

speechRecognizer.start()