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Step 6: Once the command is named, edited, described, grouped, and formatted as you want it, click Save.
Let’s test your command. Say start DragonPad, then say your command’s name. (Commands you create
yourself follow the usual rule: you must pause before and after, but not in the middle!)
You may realize now that you could make your command even more convenient: for instance, by adding a
blank line before the content so your pasted content automatically starts as a new paragraph. A section below
explains how to edit a custom command.
“Cloning” Commands and Adding Name Editor Variables
Instead of making a command from scratch, you can create a new command based on the “clone” of an
existing one, by clicking New Copy on the Command Browser (or the Create New button on the Command
Editor.)
In addition, the MyCommands Editor’s Name Editor allows the inclusion of <variables> in your command
names. Variable names provide flexibility (so you can use synonyms instead of just one wording) and can make
your custom commands even more useful, by letting them perform variations on the same action.
The variables can be synonyms, or they
can be different values, such as numbers
from 1 to 10.
<1to10> is one of the pre-filled lists
available through the Name Editor, but
you can also make your own (as was done
for <hq_nuance> in this lesson’s
illustrations).
See the Help for details.
“DragonTemplates”: Boilerplate Commands with [Fields]
(Higher editions only) Dragon 10 added to the Text-and-Graphics command type a new capability which gives a
very simple way to paste a “voice template” containing fillable fields.
To create a field in a command’s Content box, click the Variable button at the bottom of the MyCommands
Editor. By default, each field appears between square brackets as "[default value]". (If you prefer delimiters
other than square brackets, you can indicate that in the Commands tab of the Options dialog.)
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