Human-Machine Grammar Dictionary - S
Save As (action) opens the
Save As dialog box in the current program. Examples: "Save As"; "Save
As First Line"; "Save As 3 Words"; "Save As jpeg".
See Also: Open,
Path,
Save
To
Save To (action) saves the
current file to a particular folder or drive. Examples: "Save To A Drive";
"Save To My Documents".
See Also: Open,
Path,
Save
As
Screen (Down) (object)
indicates a screen of content.
1. selects a screen relative to
its position in a document. Examples: "Screen 10" moves the cursor to
the beginning of the 10th screen of a document
2. Moves the cursor
by screen. Examples: "1 Screen"; "3 Screen".
See Also: Letter,
Word,
Line,
Graph,
1-100.
Note: Screen is distinct from Page; screen is a the screen's worth of
information, while Page indicates a document page (also note that the
speech use of Page is distinct from the Page Down key, which indicates
a screen)
Scroll (object) refers to
the vertical scroll bar
1. Places the vertical scroll bar using
a scale of 1 to 100. Examples: "Scroll 50" scrolls to the middle of a
document
2. Scrolls a number of units in one direction along a
vertical scroll bar. Examples: "Scroll 6 Down"; "Scroll 30 Down"; "Scroll
10 Up"
3. Begins scrolling the cursor in a given direction. "Scroll
Down"; "Scroll Up"; "Scroll Stop"; "Scroll Screen Up"; "Scroll Screen
5"; "Scroll Set" sets the default scroll speed, "Cursor Scroll".
See
Also: Across,
Rewind,
Set,
0-100
Seconds (object) the unit
of time. Examples: "10 Seconds Time"; "40 Seconds Break".
See Also:
Minutes,
Break,
Time,
Repeat
Select (action) selects, or
highlights text. Note that selecting is usually apparent by context, making
this an uncommon command word. Examples: "All Select"
Sentence (object) indicates
a sentence
1. moves the cursor before a sentence relative to its
position in a document. Examples: "Sentence 3"
2. moves the cursor
by sentence relative to the original cursor position. Examples: "3 sentence"
moves the cursor to the third sentence below the original cursor position,
"1 Sentence"
3. used with ordinal numbers to select a sentence
relative to other objects. Examples: "4th Sentence"; "2nd Sentence 1st
Letter"; "Graph 3rd Sentence"; "2nd Sentence 1st Word 3 Words"
4.
used without numbers to select the single sentence nearest the cursor.
Examples: "This Sentence"; "Sentence Bold"; "Sentence Delete".
See
Also: Sentences,
Sentence Up,
Letter,
Word,
Line,
Graph,
Screen,
Layer,
1-100,
1st-40th
Sentence Up (object) moves
the cursor by sentence relative to the original cursor position. Examples:
"3 Sentence Up" moves the cursor to the third sentence above the original
cursor position, "1 Sentence"
See Also: Sentence,
Sentence
Ups,
Letter,
Word,
Line,
Graph,
Screen,
Layer,
1-100
Sentence Ups (object) selects
sentences to the left of the cursors. Plural even if only one sentence
is being selected. Examples: "4 Sentence Ups"; "3 Sentence Ups Delete";
"2 2 Sentence Ups Cut"; "4 Sentence Ups Arial Bold".
See Also: Sentence,
Sentences,
Rights,
Lefts,
Befores,
Afters,
Lines,
Line
Ups,
Graphs,
Graph Ups,
Screens,
Screen
Ups,
Layer,
Layer Ups,
1-100
Sentences (object) selects
sentences to the right of the cursor. Plural even if only one sentence
is being selected. Examples: "3 Sentences"; "2 Sentences Delete"; "2 1
Sentences Cut"; "4 Sentences Arial Bold".
See Also: Sentence,
Sentence
Ups,
Rights,
Lefts,
Befores,
Afters,
Lines,
Line Ups,
Graphs,
Graph Ups,
Screens,
Screen
Ups,
Layer,
Layer Ups,
1-100
Set
(action) refers to default speech command settings like speed or
waiting. Examples: "Scroll Set" changes the default scroll speed, "Down
Wait Set" changes the default wait speed in the "Down/Up 1-100 Wait 1-100"
group of commands
Short (modifier)
1.
distinguishes homophones, including symbols, numbers and abbreviations
from their longer, written-out forms. Examples: "3 Short" returns "3"
rather than "three"; "Star Short" returns "*" rather than "star"; "Versus
Short" returns "vs." rather than "versus". Note that "0-9 Short" is sometimes
used in the middle of a keystroke command to avoid ambiguity between the
symbolic form and the value of a number. Example: 3 Down" moves the cursor
down three lines vs. "3 Short Down"; which types "3", then moves the cursor
down one line, vs. "Down 3 Long"; which types "three", then moves the
cursor down one line
2. distinguishes the homophone that appears
earlier in the alphabet of two homophones of the same length. Example:
"Made Short" returns "made" rather than "maid" because "i" comes after
"d"
3. distinguishes a one-word command from a written word. Note
that the "Short" version that indicates a command is almost never used.
Examples: "Enter Short" hits the enter key, "Backspace Short" hits the
backspace key
4. distinguishes a commonly misrecognized command
from a written word
5. reduces a selection by one character on
each end. Examples: "open brace through close brace short" selects characters
between braces but not the braces themselves.
See Also: Long,
Long 1-10,
Short
1-10. (Note that in general, these modifiers are often not needed
because speech recognition programs are relatively good at choosing the
right word from context and will get even better over time. These are
meant to give the user a sure way to say a word or command when context
does not work well.)
Short 1-10 (modifier) 1. distinguishes
homophones. Homophones are arranged from one to ten starting with shorter
homophones, and, when homophones have the same number of letters, according
to alphabetical order. Examples: "For Short 1" returns "For"; "For Short
2" returns "Fore"; and "For Short 3" returns "Four"; "Pair Short 1" returns
"Pair"; "Pair Short 2" returns "Pare"; "Pair Short 3" returns "Pear" 2.
reduces a selection by n characters on each side. Examples: "open brace
through close brace short 2" selects from the second character after the
open brace through the second character before the close brace.
See
Also: Long,
Short,
Long 1-10
Short All (modifier) returns
a list of all a word's homophones, arranged in the order of the above
command. Examples: "For Short All" returns "1. For, 2. Fore, 3. Four";
"Pair Short All" returns "1. Pair, 2. Pare 3. Pear".
See Also Long
All. Note that "Short All" is not functionally different from "Long
All"
Single Quotes PLACEHOLDER
Size (action) resizes a window.
Examples: "Size 5 Up" drags the top border of a window up five units,
making the window larger, "Size 7 Down" drags the top border of a window
down seven units, making the window smaller, "Size 30 by 30" drags the
top left-hand corner of a window to the 30 by 30 screen coordinates.
See Also: Window,
0-100.9 by
0-100.9
Size 1-40 (action) refers
to font size. Examples: "Line Size 9"; "Graph Size 8".
See Also This
Small (action) opens a window
or dialog box and sizes it one-quarter the screen size. Examples: "Open
File Small"; "Open F Drive Small"; "Word Open Small".
See Also:
Window,
Very
Small,
Medium,
Big,
Very
Big
Sound (object) refers to boilerplate
audio. Can be used with "Short"; "Long" and 1-100 to refer to different
versions or sets of sounds. Examples: "Demo Sound"; "Fountain Sound Short";
"Fountain Sound Long". See Also: Long,
Short, Address,
Code, Email,
Graphic, Number,
Picture, Mix,
Spreadsheet,
Table, Template,
Text, Web
Speech (object) refers to
the speech engine. Examples: "Speech On"; "Speech Off". See Also
Microphone
Spell (phrase mode) indicates
that the rest of the phrase is a string of letters, numbers, and/or symbols,
including "Space". Examples: "Spell r b b"; "Spell 2 4 #"; "Spell 2 h
r". See Also: Spells,
Letter, Number,
Symbol
Spells
(phrase mode) selects a string of characters, including letters,
numbers, symbols and "Space". Plural even if only one character is being
selected. Examples: "Spells d Number Sign"; "Spells 1 a Close Paren";
"Spells 1 Hyphen Space". See Also: Letters,
Numbers, Spell,
Symbols
Spreadsheet (object) refers
to a boilerplate spreadsheet. Can be used with "Short"; "Long" and 1-100
to refer to different versions or sets of spreadsheets. Examples: "Demo
Spreadsheet"; "Budget Spreadsheet Short"; "Budget Spreadsheet Long". See
Also: Long,
Short, Address,
Code, Email,
Graphic, Number,
Picture, Mix,
Sound, Table,
Template, Text,
Web
Stars PLACEHOLDER
Stay (action) 1. Leaves
open a file or dialog box that closes by default. Example: "Cut To 1 Stay"
2. Preserves existing highlighting. Example: "Stay 3 Words" 3.
Leaves the cursor in position in some move commands. Example: "Scroll
50 Stay". See Also: Close,
Now
Start (modifier) denotes a
starting rather than a finishing HTML tag. Example: "Bold Start". See
Also Finish
Stop (action) stops action.
Examples: "Media Stop" stops the default media player. See Also:
Pause, Play
Symbol (phrase mode) puts
computer into symbols-only mode for the duration of an utterance. Example:
"Symbols Ampersand Slash Dot" returns "&/." Note that this is seldom used
because symbols are usually recognized well. See Also: Number,
Letter, Spell
Symbols (phrase mode) selects
symbols to the right of the cursor. Example: "Symbols Ampersand Slash
Dot" selects the next instance of "&/." See Also: Numbers,
Letters, Spells
Synonym (phrase mode) brings
up synonyms of the preceding word or set of words, including related programming
terms. Examples: "Synonym Concise"; "Synonym Tiger"; "Synonym Sendkeys"
would return a list including "SendSystemKeys". See Also: Define,
Entry, List