Wednesday, November 19, 2008 9:20 PM
robch
Macro of the Day: Disable Cap [textInDocument]
A reader recently wrote to us here at Microsoft, and asked us if there was a way to disable the built in command for "Cap [textInDocument]".
Sometimes, for some people, this command can be recognized a little too easily if you're actually trying to insert text that already exists in the document. So ... I thought ... Time for another Macro of the Day!
You can disable the built-in command once this macro is in place by saying "Disable Cap [textInDocument]". You can re-enable it by saying "Enable Cap [textInDocument]".
You can download it here in our macro code gallery, or just take a look at it here:
<speechMacros>
<!--
Author: Rob Chambers [MSFT]
Contact: listen@microsoft.com
================
What can I say?
================
Disable Cap textInDocument
Enable Cap textInDocument
================
How does it work
================
For some people, at sometimes, one of the the built-in
Vista commands ("Cap [textInDocument]") gets accidentally
recognized when it shouldn't.
This macro is a work around for that problem. It "hijacks"
the recognition for "Cap [textInDocument]" (if the command
is enabled) and instead just inserts the text in the document.
The macro also demonstrates how to have another set of
commands that enables and disables a 3rd command...
-->
<command>
<listenFor>Disable cap text in document</listenFor>
<setState name="disableCapTextInDocument" value="1"/>
</command>
<command>
<listenFor>Enable cap text in document</listenFor>
<setState name="disableCapTextInDocument" />
</command>
<command priority="100">
<stateIsSet name="disableCapTextInDocument" value="1"/>
<listenFor>cap [textInDocument]</listenFor>
<setTextFeedback>Inserting text. Say Enable "Cap [textInDocument]" to re-enable...</setTextFeedback>
<insertText>{[textInDocument]}</insertText>
</command>
</speechMacros>