Re: [orca-list] Chinfusor, a universal solution for read
- From: Rastislav Kiss <rastislav kish gmail com>
- To: "orca-list gnome org" <orca-list gnome org>
- Subject: Re: [orca-list] Chinfusor, a universal solution for read
- Date: Thu, 23 Jul 2020 14:19:39 +0200
Hi folks,
thanks for all your responses. I initially thought, that this will be
another project, which i'll end up using alone, but it's nice to hear
that others find it interesting as well.
I would like to ask you, is there someone interested in reading
Japanese texts?
I'm currently preparing an update to support bopomofo chinese
characters, as I found out, that they're out of range of normal
traditional / simplified set.
I was thinking about adding japanese stuff in the same update as well.
The problem is japanese style of writing, kana is okay, but kanji are
infact chinese characters, which are just read in japanese way. That
means, that japanese and chinese reading can't be active at the same
time, it must be just one of them.
That would mean introducing an active / inactive alphabet scheme to
Chinfusor, what will require a slight structural change in the code.
Not a bigone, it's manageable under a 0.x update, but it will be some
work.
Thus I wanted to ask, whether there are people who would actually use
it.
BBest regards
Rastislav
V Streda, 22. júl 2020 o 18:53 +0000, Peter Vágner napísal(a):
Hello,
By looking at the introductory text and website it looks awesome.
I'll try it out soon.
Definatelly great work!
Greetings
Peter
22. 7. 2020 19:02:26 Rastislav Kiss via orca-list <
orca-list gnome org>:
Hi folks,
so, finally, I have managed to pull of a rather unusual thing for
me. I
have actually finished a project! :)
If reading texts written in multiple alphabets is a problem you're
dealing with, read below, I'm pasting here the first section from
Chinfusor's documentation.
When one wants to learn a new language, or simply use a language
other
than his native, the very basic ability required in order to do so
is
to be able to read text written in the particular language. And
while
this is quite easy for latin-based languages, which can be read
simply
as they are, the situation gets much more complicated, when trying
to
read texts written in other alphabets.
Languages such as Mandarin Chinese, Japanese or Russian are widely
used
in the world. Taking in the fact, that population of China at time
of
writing this text makes about 1.43 billion, approximately every
fifth
human in the world speaks Chinese.\
And yet, when running into chinese characters, espeak, the default
speech synthesizer for many Linux distributions says just "chinese
character, chinese character, chinese character, ...".\
Russian's cyrillic or Japanese Kana don't produce much more
informative
results. That is a problem, especially if you want to read text in
these languages, either because you want to learn or simply use
them.
Thus, Chinfusor is here to help you.
If you're interested, read more at:
https://rastisoftslabs.com/2020/07/22/chinfusor-a-universal-solution-for-reading-texts-in-foreign-alphabets-on-linux/
Best regards
Rastislav
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