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Copyright 2014 Nuance Communications, Inc. All rights reserved
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IMPORTANT: In Dragon’s commands, <xyz> represents the relevant segment on the screen (which could
be more than one word and could include numbers or punctuation marks). When you give the ‘correct <xyz>’
command, be sure to say what appears on the screen, not what you had intended.
Note that it can be useful to provide some context for the word(s) you intend to change: for instance, to correct "a"
in the phrase "Carol sent a request," you may want to say “correct sent a” or "correct sent a request."
The Correction Menu: the default interface
By default, when you say a command starting with the word "correct,” Dragon brings up the Correction Menu,
which lists alternative transcriptions as well as a few of the commands you may wish to say. In the example
illustrated below, the speaker said “correct Madison.”
If what you had said is in the list, you can
pick it by voice (say "choose" and its number)
or by hand (click the desired choice or use the
down arrow and Enter key).
If it is not, you can click or say "spell that"
which opens the Spelling Window. There, you
can indicate the correct transcription using
voice, keyboard, mouse, or a combination (see
below).
Note that the last item on the Correction menu gives you direct access to the Options dialog’s Correction tab. (As
seen on that tab, another default setting you can modify is Dragon’s opening the Correction menu also when you
use the command “select <xyz>”.)
Correcting in the Spelling Window
Some users prefer the Spelling Window to be the default interface for Correction, so they can act directly when
Dragon’s choice list doesn’t show their desired transcription (instead of having to use “spell that” from the
Correction menu to get to the Spelling Window).
This requires changing one of the options on the Correction tab of Dragon’s Options dialog. Here is one way to do
this: say “open Dragon options”, then say “click Correct commands bring up Spelling Window” (or click that
option’s checkbox).










