From f6bb9e390c45d988c98a446afa69c4ede39e7835 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Aybuke Ozdemir Date: Thu, 25 Sep 2014 02:14:51 +0300 Subject: [PATCH] Staging: speakup: Fix trailing space This patch fixes checkpatch.pl error in file spkguide.txt ERROR: trailing whitespace Signed-off-by: Aybuke Ozdemir Signed-off-by: Greg Kroah-Hartman --- drivers/staging/speakup/spkguide.txt | 36 ++++++++++++++++++------------------ 1 file changed, 18 insertions(+), 18 deletions(-) diff --git a/drivers/staging/speakup/spkguide.txt b/drivers/staging/speakup/spkguide.txt index f321057..b699de3 100644 --- a/drivers/staging/speakup/spkguide.txt +++ b/drivers/staging/speakup/spkguide.txt @@ -88,7 +88,7 @@ NOT * support the internal Tripletalk! Speakup does support two other synthesizers, but because they work in conjunction with other software, they must be loaded as modules after -their related software is loaded, and so are not available at boot up. +their related software is loaded, and so are not available at boot up. These are as follows: decpc -- DecTalk PC (not available at boot up) @@ -106,7 +106,7 @@ the bootup messages. Once you have booted the system, and if necessary, have supplied the proper bootup parameter for your synthesizer, Speakup will begin -talking as soon as the kernel is loaded. In fact, it will talk a lot! +talking as soon as the kernel is loaded. In fact, it will talk a lot! It will speak all the boot up messages that the kernel prints on the screen during the boot process. This is because Speakup is not a separate screen reader, but is actually built into the operating @@ -115,7 +115,7 @@ screen using the kernel, and must get their keyboard input through the kernel, they are automatically handled properly by Speakup. There are a few exceptions, but we'll come to those later. -Note: In this guide I will refer to the numeric keypad as the keypad. +Note: In this guide I will refer to the numeric keypad as the keypad. This is done because the speakupmap.map file referred to later in this manual uses the term keypad instead of numeric keypad. Also I'm lazy and would rather only type one word. So keypad it is. Got it? Good. @@ -143,7 +143,7 @@ that way, until you press another key. You can check to see if the boot process has completed by pressing the 8 key on the keypad, which reads the current line. This also has the effect of starting Speakup talking again, so you can press keypad enter -to silence it again if the boot process has not completed. +to silence it again if the boot process has not completed. When the boot process is complete, you will arrive at a "login" prompt. At this point, you'll need to type in your user id and password, as @@ -159,7 +159,7 @@ which require root privileges. When you are running a program or command, Speakup will automatically speak new text as it arrives on the screen. You can at any time silence -the speech with keypad enter, or use any of the Speakup review keys. +the speech with keypad enter, or use any of the Speakup review keys. Here are some basic Speakup review keys, and a short description of what they do. @@ -215,12 +215,12 @@ example, if you press the keypad 8 key, you will hear: "Keypad 8 is line, say current." -You'll notice that some commands do not have keys assigned to them. +You'll notice that some commands do not have keys assigned to them. This is because they are very infrequently used commands, and are also accessible through the sys system. We'll discuss the sys system later in this manual. -You'll also notice that some commands have two keys assigned to them. +You'll also notice that some commands have two keys assigned to them. This is because Speakup has a built in set of alternative key bindings for laptop users. The alternate speakup key is the caps lock key. You can press and hold the caps lock key, while pressing an alternate @@ -292,12 +292,12 @@ spk key_kp5 = spell_phonetic spk key_kp6 = say_to_right key_kpplus = say_screen spk key_kpplus = say_win - key_kp1 = say_prev_char + key_kp1 = say_prev_char spk key_kp1 = right_edge key_kp2 = say_char spk key_kp2 = say_to_bottom double key_kp2 = say_phonetic_char - key_kp3 = say_next_char + key_kp3 = say_next_char spk key_kp3 = bottom_edge key_kp0 = spk_key key_kpdot = say_position @@ -354,7 +354,7 @@ As a convenience, run as root ln -s /sys/accessibility/speakup /speakup -to directly access speakup parameters from /speakup. +to directly access speakup parameters from /speakup. You can see these entries by typing the command: ls -1 /speakup/* @@ -497,7 +497,7 @@ only, is owned by root, and belongs to the root group. Doing a cat of this: cat /speakup/version -Speakup v-2.00 CVS: Thu Oct 21 10:38:21 EDT 2004 +Speakup v-2.00 CVS: Thu Oct 21 10:38:21 EDT 2004 synth dtlk version 1.1 The display shows the Speakup version number, along with the version @@ -517,7 +517,7 @@ volume is set at. All the entries in the Speakup sys system are readable, some are writable by root only, and some are writable by everyone. Unless you know what you are doing, you should probably leave the ones that are -writable by root only alone. Most of the names are self explanatory. +writable by root only alone. Most of the names are self explanatory. Vol for controlling volume, pitch for pitch, rate for controlling speaking rate, etc. If you find one you aren't sure about, you can post a query on the Speakup list. @@ -527,7 +527,7 @@ on the Speakup list. It is possible to change to a different synthesizer while speakup is running. In other words, it is not necessary to reboot the system in order to use a different synthesizer. You can simply echo the -synthesizer keyword to the /speakup/synth sys entry. +synthesizer keyword to the /speakup/synth sys entry. Depending on your situation, you may wish to echo none to the synth sys entry, to disable speech while one synthesizer is disconnected and a second one is connected in its place. Then echo the keyword for the @@ -632,7 +632,7 @@ Espeakup is a connector between Speakup and the eSpeak software synthesizer. Espeakup may already be available as a package for your distribution of Linux. If it is not packaged, you need to install it manually. You can find it in the contrib/ subdirectory of the Speakup sources. -The filename is espeakup-$VERSION.tar.bz2, where $VERSION +The filename is espeakup-$VERSION.tar.bz2, where $VERSION depends on the current release of Espeakup. The Speakup 3.1.2 source ships with version 0.71 of Espeakup. The README file included with the Espeakup sources describes the process @@ -660,7 +660,7 @@ daemons are started by the bootup scripts. These procedures are not described in this document. If you built Espeakup manually, the "make install" step placed the binary -under /usr/bin. +under /usr/bin. Run the following command as root: /usr/bin/espeakup Espeakup should start speaking. @@ -684,7 +684,7 @@ distribution may also have a precompiled Speech Dispatcher package. Once you've installed, configured, and tested Speech Dispatcher with your chosen software synthesizer, you still need one more piece of software -in order to make things work. You need a package called speechd-up. +in order to make things work. You need a package called speechd-up. You get it from the free(b)soft web site mentioned above. After you've compiled and installed speechd-up, you are almost ready to begin using your software synthesizer. @@ -813,7 +813,7 @@ press the keypad slash key once. Speakup will say, "mark". Next, position the reading cursor on the rightmost character of the above url. Press the keypad slash key once again to actually cut the text from the screen. Speakup will say, "cut". Although we call this -cutting, Speakup does not actually delete the cut text from the screen. +cutting, Speakup does not actually delete the cut text from the screen. It makes a copy of the text in a special buffer for later pasting. Now that you have the url cut from the screen, you can paste it into @@ -960,7 +960,7 @@ you reboot, or until you load another keymap. One final warning. If you try to load a partial map, you will quickly find that all the mappings you didn't include in your file got deleted -from the working map. Be extremely careful, and always make a backup! +from the working map. Be extremely careful, and always make a backup! You have been warned! 14. Internationalizing Speakup -- 2.7.4