The SpeechRecognition interface of the Web Speech API is the controller interface for the recognition service; this also handles the SpeechRecognitionEvent sent from the recognition service.
Note: On some browsers, like Chrome, using Speech Recognition on a web page involves a server-based recognition engine. Your audio is sent to a web service for recognition processing, so it won't work offline.
Returns and sets the language of the current SpeechRecognition. If not specified, this defaults to the HTML lang attribute value, or the user agent's language setting if that isn't set either.
Controls whether interim results should be returned (true) or not (false.) Interim results are results that are not yet final (e.g. the SpeechRecognitionResult.isFinal property is false.)
Stops the speech recognition service from listening to incoming audio, and attempts to return a SpeechRecognitionResult using the audio captured so far.
Events
Listen to these events using addEventListener() or by assigning an event listener to the oneventname property of this interface.
Fired when the speech recognition service returns a final result with no significant recognition. This may involve some degree of recognition, which doesn't meet or exceed the confidence threshold. Also available via the onnomatch property.
Fired when the speech recognition service returns a result — a word or phrase has been positively recognized and this has been communicated back to the app. Also available via the onresult property.
Fired when the speech recognition service has begun listening to incoming audio with intent to recognize grammars associated with the current SpeechRecognition. Also available via the onstart property.
After some other values have been defined, we then set it so that the recognition service starts when a click event occurs (see SpeechRecognition.start().) When a result has been successfully recognized, the result event fires, we extract the color that was spoken from the event object, and then set the background color of the <html> element to that color.
js
const grammar ="#JSGF V1.0; grammar colors; public <color> = aqua | azure | beige | bisque | black | blue | brown | chocolate | coral | crimson | cyan | fuchsia | ghostwhite | gold | goldenrod | gray | green | indigo | ivory | khaki | lavender | lime | linen | magenta | maroon | moccasin | navy | olive | orange | orchid | peru | pink | plum | purple | red | salmon | sienna | silver | snow | tan | teal | thistle | tomato | turquoise | violet | white | yellow ;";const recognition =newSpeechRecognition();const speechRecognitionList =newSpeechGrammarList();
speechRecognitionList.addFromString(grammar,1);
recognition.grammars = speechRecognitionList;
recognition.continuous =false;
recognition.lang ="en-US";
recognition.interimResults =false;
recognition.maxAlternatives =1;const diagnostic = document.querySelector(".output");const bg = document.querySelector("html");
document.body.onclick=()=>{
recognition.start();
console.log("Ready to receive a color command.");};
recognition.onresult=(event)=>{const color = event.results[0][0].transcript;
diagnostic.textContent =`Result received: ${color}`;
bg.style.backgroundColor = color;};