5.0
Table Of Contents
- Contents
- About This Guide
- Introducing Dragon NaturallySpeaking
- Using Dragon NaturallySpeaking Successfully
- Improving Your Speech Recognition
- Dictating Names, Numbers & Punctuation
- Editing and Revising Text
- Working With Your Desktop and Windows
- Starting programs
- Opening documents and folders
- Switching between open windows
- Copying text to other programs
- Opening and closing menus
- Selecting buttons, tabs, and options
- Selecting icons on the desktop
- Resizing and closing windows
- Scrolling in windows and listboxes
- Pressing keyboard keys
- Moving the mouse pointer and clicking the mouse
- Working With E-Mail and the Web
- Managing Users
- Creating Your Own Dragon NaturallySpeaking Commands
- Using Dragon NaturallySpeaking With a Portable Recorder
- Dragon NaturallySpeaking Version 5 Commands List
- Index
CHAPTER 5
Editing and Revising Text
Dragon NaturallySpeaking User’s Guide
95
Copying, cutting, and pasting
text
You can move text from one place to another by using the
“Copy That,”
“Cut That,”
and
“Paste That”
commands.
To copy, cut, or paste text:
1 Select the text you want to copy or cut.
2 Say
“Copy That”
or
“Cut That.”
3 Move the insertion point to where you want to paste the text.
4 Say
“Paste That.”
You can copy your entire document to the Clipboard by saying “Copy All to
Clipboard.” This is useful when you want to copy text to another window. (See “Copying
text to other programs” on page 106.)
Capitalizing text
Capitalizing the first letter of the next word you
dictate
Dragon NaturallySpeaking capitalizes many words automatically. It
capitalizes the first word in a sentence (following a period, question
mark, or exclamation mark). It capitalizes the first word after you say
“
New Paragraph
” (though not when you say “
New Line
”), and it
capitalizes proper names (when these words are already in the Dragon
NaturallySpeaking vocabulary in capitalized form).
When you’re dictating, you can capitalize words that aren’t automatically
capitalized by saying
“Cap”
and then the word. For example, say
“Cap
fluffy”
to get “Fluffy.”
NOTE
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