Search icon CANCEL
Arrow left icon
Explore Products
Best Sellers
New Releases
Books
Videos
Audiobooks
Learning Hub
Conferences
Free Learning
Arrow right icon
Arrow up icon
GO TO TOP
Learning Microsoft Cognitive Services

You're reading from   Learning Microsoft Cognitive Services Use Cognitive Services APIs to add AI capabilities to your applications

Arrow left icon
Product type Paperback
Published in Sep 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789800616
Length 312 pages
Edition 3rd Edition
Languages
Arrow right icon
Author (1):
Arrow left icon
Leif Larsen Henning Larsen Leif Larsen Henning Larsen
Author Profile Icon Leif Larsen Henning Larsen
Leif Larsen Henning Larsen
Arrow right icon
View More author details
Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Microsoft Cognitive Services 2. Analyzing Images to Recognize a Face FREE CHAPTER 3. Analyzing Videos 4. Letting Applications Understand Commands 5. Speaking with Your Application 6. Understanding Text 7. Building Recommendation Systems for Businesses 8. Querying Structured Data in a Natural Way 9. Adding Specialized Searches 10. Connecting the Pieces A. LUIS Entities B. License Information Index

Getting feedback on detected faces

Now that we have seen what else Microsoft Cognitive Services can offer, we are going to add an API to our face detection application. In this section, we will add the Bing Speech API to make the application say the number of faces out loud.

This feature of the API is not provided in the NuGet package, and as such, we are going to use the REST API.

To reach our end goal, we are going to add two new classes, TextToSpeak and Authentication. The first class will be in charge of generating the correct headers and making the calls to our service endpoint. The latter class will be in charge of generating an authentication token. This will be tied together in our ViewModel, where we will make the application speak back to us.

We need to get our hands on an API key first. Head over to the Microsoft Azure Portal. Create a new service for Bing Speech.

To be able to call the Bing Speech API, we need to have an authorization token. Go back to Visual Studio and create a new file called Authentication.cs. Place this in the Model folder.

We need to add two new references to the project. Find the System.Runtime.Serialization and System.Web packages in the Assembly tab in the Add References window and add them.

In our Authentication class, define four private variables and one public property, as follows:

    private string _requestDetails;
    private string _token;
    private Timer _tokenRenewer;

    private const int TokenRefreshInterval = 9;

    public string Token { get { return _token; } }

The constructor should accept one string parameter, clientSecret. The clientSecret parameter is the API key you signed up for.

In the constructor, assign the _clientSecret variable, as follows:

    _clientSecret = clientSecret;

Create a new function called Initialize, as follows:

    public async Task Initialize()
    {
        _token = GetToken();

        _tokenRenewer = new Timer(new TimerCallback(OnTokenExpiredCallback), this,
        TimeSpan.FromMinutes(TokenRefreshInterval),
        TimeSpan.FromMilliseconds(-1));
    }

We then fetch the access token in a method that we will create shortly.

Finally, we create our timer class, which will call the callback function in nine minutes. The callback function will need to fetch the access token again and assign it to the _token variable. It also needs to ensure that we run the timer again in nine minutes.

Next, we need to create the GetToken method. This method should return a Task<string>object, and it should be declared as private and marked as async.

In the method, we start by creating an HttpClient object, pointing to an endpoint that will generate our token. We specify the root endpoint and add the token issue path, as follows:

    using(var client = new HttpClient())
    {
        client.DefaultRequestHeaders.Add ("Opc-Apim-Subscription-Key", _clientSecret);
        UriBuilder uriBuilder = new UriBuilder (https://api.cognitive.microsoft.com/sts/v1.0");
        uriBuilder.Path = "/issueToken";

We then go on to make a POST call to generate a token, as follows:

var result = await client.PostAsync(uriBuilder.Uri.AbsoluteUri, null);

When the request has been sent, we expect there to be a response. We want to read this response and return the response string:

return await result.Content.ReadAsStringAsync();

Add a new file called TextToSpeak.cs, if you have not already done so. Put this file in the Model folder.

Beneath the newly created class (but inside the namespace), we want to add two event argument classes. These will be used to handle audio events, which we will see later.

The AudioEventArgs class simply takes a generic stream, as shown in the following code. You can imagine it being used to send the audio stream to our application:

    public class AudioEventArgs : EventArgs
    {
        public AudioEventArgs(Stream eventData)
        {
            EventData = eventData;
        }

        public StreamEventData { get; private set; }
    }

The next class allows us to send an event with a specific error message:

    public class AudioErrorEventArgs : EventArgs
    {
        public AudioErrorEventArgs(string message)
        {
            ErrorMessage = message;
        }

        public string ErrorMessage { get; private set; }
    }

We move on to start on the TextToSpeak class, where we start off by declaring some events and class members, as follows:

    public class TextToSpeak
    {
        public event EventHandler<AudioEventArgs>OnAudioAvailable;
        public event EventHandler<AudioErrorEventArgs>OnError;

        private string _gender;
        private string _voiceName;
        private string _outputFormat;
        private string _authorizationToken;
        private AccessTokenInfo _token;

        private List<KeyValuePair<string, string>> _headers = new  List<KeyValuePair<string, string>>();

The first two lines in the class are events that use the event argument classes that we created earlier. These events will be triggered if a call to the API finishes (returning some audio), or if anything fails. The next few lines are string variables, which we will use as input parameters. We have one line to contain our access token information. The last line creates a new list, which we will use to hold our request headers.

We add two constant strings to our class, as follows:

private const string RequestUri =  "https://speech.platform.bing.com/synthesize";

private const string SsmlTemplate =
    "<speak version='1.0'xml:lang='en-US'>
        <voice xml:lang='en-US'xml:gender='{0}'
        name='{1}'>{2}
        </voice>
    </speak>";

The first string contains the request URI. That is the REST API endpoint that we need to call to execute our request. Next, we have a string defining our Speech Synthesis Markup Language (SSML) template. This is where we will specify what the speech service should say, and how it should say it.

Next, we create our constructor, as follows:

        public TextToSpeak()
        {
            _gender = "Female";
            _outputFormat = "riff-16khz-16bit-mono-pcm";
            _voiceName = "Microsoft Server Speech Text to Speech Voice (en-US, ZiraRUS)";
        }

Here, we are just initializing some of the variables that we declared earlier. As you may see, we are defining the voice as female and we define it so that it uses a specific voice. In terms of gender, it can be either female or male. The voice name can be one of a long list of options. We will look more into the details of that list when we go through this API in a later chapter.

The last line specifies the output format of the audio. This will define the format and codec in use by the resultant audio stream. Again, this can be a number of varieties, which we will look into in a later chapter.

Following the constructor, there are three public methods that we will create. These will generate an authentication token and some HTTP headers, and finally execute our call to the API. Before we create these, you should add two helper methods to be able to raise our events. Call them the RaiseOnAudioAvailable and RaiseOnError methods. They should accept AudioEventArgs and AudioErrorEventArgs as parameters.

Next, add a new method called the GenerateHeaders method, as follows:

        public void GenerateHeaders()
        {
            _headers.Add(new KeyValuePair<string, string>("Content-Type", "application/ssml+xml"));
            _headers.Add(new KeyValuePair<string, string>("X-Microsoft-OutputFormat", _outputFormat));
            _headers.Add(new KeyValuePair<string, string>("Authorization", _authorizationToken));
            _headers.Add(new KeyValuePair<string, string>("X-Search-AppId", Guid.NewGuid().ToString("N")));
            _headers.Add(new KeyValuePair<string, string>("X-Search-ClientID", Guid.NewGuid().ToString("N")));
            _headers.Add(new KeyValuePair<string, string>("User-Agent", "Chapter1"));
        }

Here, we add the HTTP headers to our previously created list. These headers are required for the service to respond, and if any are missing, it will yield an HTTP/400 response. We will cover what we are using as headers in more detail later. For now, just make sure that they are present.

Following this, we want to add a new method called GenerateAuthenticationToken, as follows:

        public bool GenerateAuthenticationToken(string clientSecret)
        {
            Authentication auth = new Authentication(clientSecret);

This method accepts one string parameter, the client secret (your API key). First, we create a new object of the Authentication class, which we looked at earlier, as follows:

        try
        {
            _token = auth.Token;

            if (_token != null)
            {
                _authorizationToken = $"Bearer {_token}";

                return true;
            }
            else
            {
                RaiseOnError(new AudioErrorEventArgs("Failed to generate authentication token."));
                return false;
            }
        }

We use the authentication object to retrieve an access token. This token is used in our authorization token string, which, as we saw earlier, is being passed on in our headers. If the application for some reason fails to generate the access token, we trigger an error event.

Finish this method by adding the associated catch clause. If any exceptions occur, we want to raise a new error event.

The last method that we need to create in this class is going to be called the SpeakAsync method, as shown in the following screenshot. This method will actually perform the request to the Speech API:

        public Task SpeakAsync(string textToSpeak, CancellationTokencancellationToken)
        {
            varcookieContainer = new CookieContainer();
            var handler = new HttpClientHandler() {
                CookieContainer = cookieContainer
            };
            var client = new HttpClient(handler);

The method takes two parameters. One is the string, which will be the text that we want to be spoken. The next is cancellationToken; this can be used to propagate the command that the given operation should be cancelled.

When entering the method, we create three objects that we will use to execute the request. These are classes from the .NET library. We will not be going through them in any more detail.

We generated some headers earlier, and we need to add these to our HTTP client. We do this by adding the headers in the preceding foreach loop, basically looping through the entire list, as shown in the following code:

            foreach(var header in _headers)
            {
                client.DefaultRequestHeaders.TryAddWithoutValidation (header.Key, header.Value);
            }

Next, we create an HTTP Request Message, specifying the request URI and the fact that we will send data through the POST method. We also specify the content using the SSML template that we created earlier, adding the correct parameters (gender, voice name, and the text we want to be spoken), as shown in the following code:

            var request = new HttpRequestMessage(HttpMethod.Post, RequestUri)
            {
                Content = new StringContent(string.Format(SsmlTemplate, _gender, _voiceName, textToSpeak))
            };

We use the HTTP client to send the HTTP request asynchronously, as follows:

            var httpTask = client.SendAsync(request, HttpCompletionOption.ResponseHeadersRead, cancellationToken);

The following code is a continuation of the asynchronous send call that we made previously. This will run asynchronously as well, and check the status of the response. If the response is successful, it will read the response message as a stream and trigger the audio event. If everything succeeds, then that stream should contain our text in spoken words:

    var saveTask = httpTask.ContinueWith(async (responseMessage, token) =>
    {
        try
        {
            if (responseMessage.IsCompleted &&
                responseMessage.Result != null &&  
                responseMessage.Result.IsSuccessStatusCode) {
                var httpStream = await responseMessage. Result.Content.ReadAsStreamAsync().ConfigureAwait(false);
                RaiseOnAudioAvailable(new AudioEventArgs (httpStream));
            } else {
                RaiseOnError(new AudioErrorEventArgs($"Service returned {responseMessage.Result.StatusCode}"));
            }
        }
        catch(Exception e)
        {
            RaiseOnError(new AudioErrorEventArgs (e.GetBaseException().Message));
        }
    }

If the response indicates anything other than success, we will raise the error event.

We also want to add a catch clause and a finally clause to this. Raise an error if an exception is caught and dispose of all objects used in the finally clause.

The final code we need specifies that the continuation task is attached to the parent task. We also need to add cancellationToken to this task. Add the following code to finish off the method:

    }, TaskContinuationOptions.AttachedToParent, cancellationToken);
    return saveTask;
}

With this in place, we are now able to utilize this class in our application. Open the MainViewModel.cs file and declare a new class variable, as follows:

        private TextToSpeak _textToSpeak;

Add the following code in the constructor to initialize the newly added object. We also need to call a function to generate the authentication token, as follows:

            _textToSpeak = new TextToSpeak();
            _textToSpeak.OnAudioAvailable +=  _textToSpeak_OnAudioAvailable;
            _textToSpeak.OnError += _textToSpeak_OnError;

            GenerateToken();

After we have created the object, we hook up the two events to event handlers. Then we generate an authentication token by creating a GenerateToken function with the following content:

public async void GenerateToken()
{
    if (await _textToSpeak.GenerateAuthenticationToken("BING_SPEECH_API_KEY_HERE"))
        _textToSpeak.GenerateHeaders();
}

Then we generate an authentication token, specifying the API key for the Bing Speech API. If that call succeeds, we generate the HTTP headers required.

We need to add the event handlers, so create the _textToSpeak_OnError method first, as follows:

            private void _textToSpeak_OnError(object sender, AudioErrorEventArgs e)
            {
                StatusText = $"Status: Audio service failed -  {e.ErrorMessage}";
            }

It should be a rather simple method, just outputting the error message to the user in the status text field.

Next, we need to create a _textToSpeak_OnAudioAvailable method, as follows:

        private void _textToSpeak_OnAudioAvailable(object sender, AudioEventArgs e)
        {
            SoundPlayer player = new SoundPlayer(e.EventData);
            player.Play();
            e.EventData.Dispose();
        }

Here, we utilize the SoundPlayer class from the .NET framework. This allows us to add the stream data directly and simply play the message.

The last part that we need for everything to work is to make the call to the SpeakAsync method. We can make this by adding the following at the end of our DetectFace method:

    await _textToSpeak.SpeakAsync(textToSpeak, CancellationToken.None);

With that in place, you should now be able to compile and run the application. By loading a photo and clicking on Detect face, you should be able to get the number of faces in the image spoken back to you. Just remember to have your audio turned on!

lock icon The rest of the chapter is locked
Register for a free Packt account to unlock a world of extra content!
A free Packt account unlocks extra newsletters, articles, discounted offers, and much more. Start advancing your knowledge today.
Unlock this book and the full library FREE for 7 days
Get unlimited access to 7000+ expert-authored eBooks and videos courses covering every tech area you can think of
Renews at £16.99/month. Cancel anytime