React hooks for in-browser Speech Recognition and Speech Synthesis. Demo here
yarn add react-speech-kit
A full example can be found here. The source code is in the examples directory.
A react hook for the browser's SpeechSynthesis API. It exposes the options and controls to the underlying SpeechSynthesis in the browser.
import React, { useState } from 'react';
import { useSpeechSynthesis } from 'react-speech-kit';
function Example() {
const [value, setValue] = useState('');
const { speak } = useSpeechSynthesis();
return (
<div>
<textarea
value={value}
onChange={(event) => setValue(event.target.value)}
/>
<button onClick={() => speak({ text: value })}>Speak</button>
</div>
);
}
function()
optional
Called when SpeechSynthesis finishes reading the text or is cancelled. It is called with no argumnents. Very useful for triggering a state change after something has been read.
useSpeechSynthesis returns an object which contains the following:
function({ text: string, voice: SpeechSynthesisVoice })
Call to make the browser read some text. You can change the voice by passing an available SpeechSynthesisVoice (from the voices array). Note that some browsers require a direct user action initiate SpeechSynthesis. To make sure it works, it is recommended that you call speak for the first time in a click event handler.
function()
Call to make SpeechSynthesis stop reading.
boolean
True when SpeechSynthesis is actively speaking.
boolean
Will be true if the browser supports SpeechSynthesis. Keep this in mind and use this as a guard before rendering any control that allow a user to call speak.
[SpeechSynthesisVoice]
An array of available voices which can be passed to the speak function. An example SpeechSynthesisVoice voice has the following properties.
{
default: true
lang: "en-AU"
localService: true
name: "Karen"
voiceURI: "Karen"
}
In some browsers voices load asynchronously. In these cases, the array will be empty until they are available.
A react hook for the browser's SpeechRecognition API.
import React, { useState } from 'react';
import { useSpeechRecognition } from 'react-speech-kit';
function Example() {
const [value, setValue] = useState('');
const { listen, listening, stop } = useSpeechRecognition({
onResult: (result) => {
setValue(result);
},
});
return (
<div>
<textarea
value={value}
onChange={(event) => setValue(event.target.value)}
/>
<button onMouseDown={listen} onMouseUp={stop}>
🎤
</button>
{listening && <div>Go ahead I'm listening</div>}
</div>
);
}
function()
Called when SpeechRecognition stops listening.
function(string)
Called when SpeechRecognition has a result. It is called with a string containing a transcript of the recognized speech.
useSpeechRecognition returns an object which contains the following:
function({ interimResults: boolean, lang: string })
Call to make the browser start listening for input. Every time it processes a result, it will forward a transcript to the provided onResult function. You can modify behavior by passing the following arguments:
-
lang
string
The language the SpeechRecognition will try to interpret the input in. Use the languageCode from this list of languages that Chrome supports (here) e.g: "en-AU". If not specified, this defaults to the HTML lang attribute value, or the user agent's language setting if that isn't set either. -
interimResults
boolean
(default: true)
SpeechRecognition can provide realtime results as it's trying to figure out the best match for the input. Set to false if you only want the final result.
function()
Call to make SpeechRecognition stop listening. This will call the provided onEnd function as well.
boolean
True when SpeechRecognition is actively listening.
boolean
Will be true if the browser supports SpeechRecognition. Keep this in mind and use this as a guard before rendering any control that allow a user to call listen.