Forum Discussion
Text to speech adding the word "Dot" to end of audio file.
I pasted in a block of text and ran the text to speech option. It works well until the last sentence where it adds the word "Dot" to the audio clip. If I take the last period out, it still adds "Dot". If I delete a couple of sentences back, the word "Dot" disappears.
Anyone else have this happen?
- BenitaTong-5299Community Member
I had a coworker run into this problem yesterday. His workaround was to break up the paragraph (e.g., put half of it on a new line in the text entry or to paragraph break each sentence onto a new line) and text-to-speech will no longer say "dot." While not an ideal solution, it works for now. It seems like it's being caused by an odd paragraph character limit.
I've attached a file where I tested the paragraph character limit with lorem ipsum filler text.
- AdamBraun-0ec5bCommunity Member
Hi Bob,
I had the same experience with a particularly long block of text -- I could get the behavior to stop if I took away enough of the text, but removing any of the content permanently wasn't really an option. So, my guess is that it has something to do with length of text.
But, you can use the audio editor (click the speaker icon on your slide, go to Audio Tools on the top-bar when it appears) and manually edit out the last couple of seconds where the "dot" appears.
- ScottSuter-d72fCommunity Member
I had the same problem. Using the sound editing tool is a finicky, and fine art, but it worked. Thanks for the advice. I used word.docx to edit, copy and paste the text to AS 360. I'll check the outline view for any hidden code, but this is a good solution until the bug is addressed. Thank you
- TrevorPeglow089Community Member
Bob
I've never seen this happen, but I haven't used text to speech in a month or so. Let me play around and see if it happens to me.
- BobODonnellCommunity Member
My guess is there was a hiccup in the text or the program. I just went back and cleared all the text out, dropped it into notepad and then hand typed the text. Also made a new story with the old text. Maybe it has something to do with the amount. I have no clue at this point.
- TrevorPeglow089Community Member
Sometimes Articulate can get buggy. I remember on one learning I was working on, I had text animating in by paragraph, and for some reason when a new paragraph came in, the last line of the previous paragraph would ALSO animate in again, and appear thicker. Had to delete and redo the text box.
- BobODonnellCommunity Member
Yes... already been there. Thanks. Its just annoying.
Hi Bob,
Pasting into Notepad is a good recommendation to strip out any unnecessary and invisible formatting, which could be contributing to what you're hearing with the text to speech. It's not something I've heard of other folks running into yet, have you seen this on a lot of files, or this is the first time?
- ScottSuter-d72fCommunity Member
I had the same problem
- BobODonnellCommunity Member
I always copy and paste from Notepad. Learned that lesson years ago. It may have something to do with the length of the text. If you trim out a few sentences, the "Dot" goes away.
I posted my story file a couple of replies up Ashley... feel free to play with it. I think its a small glitch in the program. I've cut and pasted from Notepad, typed directly in the text to speech window, etc. It still exports with the word "Dot".
Bob
- DaneJames1Community Member
I have had the same issue a few times in 360
Hi there Dane! This has been a tough one for us to nail down, since we haven't had any luck recreating it in a new file. Do you have a sample file that shows the issue? If so, we'd love to take a look at it!
You can share that file with us right here.
- JillFreeman-64dCommunity Member
Hi Alyssa. I just submitted a support ticket and enclosed my SL file with the "DOT" narration. It happens to me quite a bit. The "DOT" is not only at the end of the file, it can be anywhere in the paragraph. I also receive the "Something went wrong" message when working with TTS. Hope they can fix this! It is slowing me down!
- BenitaTong-5299Community Member
Hi Jill,
In case this helps, the best way currently to get around the text-to-speech adding the word "dot" is to break up the text into paragraphs when generating the text-to-speech.
I found the character limit for a paragraph to be ~952 (no spaces)/1,115 (with spaces). By 978 (no spaces)/1,144 (with spaces), the spoken word "dot" appears.