[Oberon] Oberon for a C++ user.

eas lab lab.eas at gmail.com
Sun Nov 6 15:32:10 CET 2016


The full version of Adobe Acrobat has a neat Tools > Recognize text
feature which does the equivalent of an OCR scan of the document and
creates searchable text. I have just converted this document and the
text to speech function also appears to work. I've also added some
bookmarks to the document for you so you can use the Acrobat
navigation pane to jump to a particular section of the document. You
can download this updated version of the document from:

http://www.cfbsoftware.com/gpcp/eth-38713-02 Insight Ethos.pdf  (8.86 MB file)
===================
404 error
One of the most absurd features of M$ is <tokens> containing white-chars.
So here your URL is seen by Gmail [a similar clown system] as:
http://www.cfbsoftware.com/gpcp/eth-38713-02
which is coloured blue : as a hot-link.
So smart-ass gmail  & M$ IE fail to fetch it, with error 404.
============
BTW, since Win:narrator's speech quality is better than what I use every day:
is it possible to capture the probably *.wav files, for later replaying?

Also from <pdf pictures> to speech is a very non-trivial task,
and a prime example of process-piping.
The pdf is not spoken. It's 2 stages: pdfImages -> Text -> SoundFile,
because both stages are needed for other general useage.

Why hasn't M$ got <pdf2text>; a fundamental tool applicable to most *.pdf

== Chris Glur.



On 11/6/16, Chris Burrows <chris at cfbsoftware.com> wrote:
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: eas lab [mailto:lab.eas at gmail.com]
>> Sent: Sunday, 6 November 2016 5:32 PM
>> To: chris at cfbsoftware.com; ETH Oberon and related systems
>> Subject: Re: [Oberon] Oberon for a C++ user.
>>
>> A reader commented on ETHO material being 'dated'.
>>
>> > ... by Clemens Szyperski published in 1992.
>>
>> I fetched this and it seems excellent,
>> except that I'm shackled to using the LASTEST/ garbage x64Windows, so
>> I can't examine the text in a structured way [like a tree].
>>
>> It needs multiple TextFrames to eg.
>> 1. scan the contents, and decide to go to <HCI> page 159 2. where he
>> mentions "Ethos": so, keeping pg 159 and in 3. a 3rd TextFrame
>> searching for his explanation re. Ethos.
>>
>
> When reading PDF files in Windows there are several ways to have more than
> one view at a time e.g.
>
> 1. There is a split-screen control at the top of the vertical scroll bar.
> Drag this down and you will have two separately controllable views on the
> document.
>
> 2. You can usually open a PDF file more than once. E.g. a) in Acrobat select
> Window > New Window, b) In internet Explorer select File > New Window
>
> Also recent Windows versions have additional Windows management features
> (e.g. for tiling Windows) that you may not be aware of if you have only just
> upgraded. Google for "windows 10 windows management tricks" for some tips on
> how to do this.
>
>> PS. it's a pity that the *.pdf  is not, mostly reconvertible to text,
>> except by OCR. Such material is efficiently absorbed by TextToSpeech,
>> depending on the users life-style.
>
> Yes - it’s a pity that some who scan these documents do not seem to know how
> to add bookmarks and add text search and text-to-speech capability. It's not
> that difficult to do.
>
> The full version of Adobe Acrobat has a neat Tools > Recognize text feature
> which does the equivalent of an OCR scan of the document and creates
> searchable text. I have just converted this document and the text to speech
> function also appears to work. I've also added some bookmarks to the
> document for you so you can use the Acrobat navigation pane to jump to a
> particular section of the document. You can download this updated version of
> the document from:
>
> http://www.cfbsoftware.com/gpcp/eth-38713-02 Insight Ethos.pdf  (8.86 MB
> file)
>
> Regards,
> Chris
>
> Chris Burrows
> CFB Software
> http://www.cfbsoftware.com/gpcp
>
>
>
>
> --
> Oberon at lists.inf.ethz.ch mailing list for ETH Oberon and related systems
> https://lists.inf.ethz.ch/mailman/listinfo/oberon
>


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