5/15/2023 0 Comments Heaset codebox![]() I have questions around this topic like, Which commands will help me the most for productivity? (depends on individual workload mixes), How many commands are required for typical workload/workspaces? (probably depends on novice/expert status in the workspace), and musings like Could voice (overall) ever be faster and more productive than fingers alone? Command set sizes, functionalities, and syntaxes all seem to influence the answers to those questions. In other words, with whatever syntax that makes sense at the moment for that single command, without considering the predictability or syntactic structure of the whole set. Another ongoing issue mentioned less often here, is that the command set is usually grown incrementally with command names that are assigned on the fly in a stream-of-consciousness way. Even the default Dragon set of commands, out of the box, has so many variations for the same thing that they can be difficult to access and benefit from. ![]() It seems to me that as soon as you get past the beginner stage with voice, you benefit more and more from a predictable syntax for the commands in your set so that you can remember/access/speak them with reasonable effort and accuracy.įor example, the problem of "remembering commands" has been mentioned on the forum many times. I have been thinking about what it means to have a large set of commands and how the size and functionality of command sets might be used in some productive way. It seems to me that what I call "dynamic data" commands (or what I think Lunis calls "AI" commands) count as one command, even though they can accept an infinite number of data variations in the variable part of the command. Just to add a bit of clarity, I suppose no experienced person would confuse the number of commands with the number of possible operations, as Alan points out. Win10/11/圆4, AMD Ryzen 7 3700X/3950X, 64/128GB RAM, Dragon 15.3, SP 7 Standard, SpeechStart, Office 365, KB 2017, Dragon Capture, Samson Meteor USB Desk Mic, Amazon YUWAKAYI headset, Klim and JUKSTG earbuds with microphones, excellent Sareville Wireless Mono Headset, 3 BenQ 2560x1440 monitors, Microsoft Sculpt Keyboard and Logitech G502 awesome gaming mouse. Might I ask the Jedi Masters out there there about the size of their working command sets? One day, I hope to tackle the problem of coding in VS with voice assistance, to see what I can learn and come up with. I think I read somewhere that Edgar had 2,500 commands in play, so approaching 1000 in my pile made me feel like I must be well on my way to be an *apprentice* Jedi Knight. (Commands that take voice parameters help a lot, reducing the commands required by 4x or 10x. etc.) When you start working with voice, you soon find out that you need to give an explicit name to most of the zillions of unnamed command sequences that humans use to create a result. Many are in groups and variations because of directions (up, down, left, right, bigger, smaller, taller, wider, app-specific versions, fonts big and small, italics, bold, headings, indents, bullets, etc. Over the past couple of days, I had the opportunity to get a count of my commands, and I counted nearly 1,000 of them for various things. ![]() How many commands do the experts have and use? ![]()
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