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39 lines
1.5 KiB
Markdown
39 lines
1.5 KiB
Markdown
# Instructioning best practices (TTS)
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## Contents
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- Structure
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- Specificity
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- Avoiding conflicts
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- Pronunciation and names
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- Pauses and pacing
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- Iterate deliberately
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- Where to find copy/paste recipes
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## Structure
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- Use a consistent order: affect -> tone -> pacing -> emotion -> pronunciation/pauses -> emphasis -> delivery.
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- For complex requests, use short labeled lines instead of a long paragraph.
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## Specificity
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- Name the delivery you want ("calm and steady" vs "friendly").
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- If you need a specific cadence, call it out explicitly ("slow and measured", "brisk and energetic").
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## Avoiding conflicts
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- Do not mix opposing instructions ("fast and slow", "formal and casual").
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- Keep instructions short: 4 to 8 lines are usually enough.
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## Pronunciation and names
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- For acronyms, write the pronunciation hint in text ("A-I" instead of "AI").
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- For names or brands, add a simple phonetic guide in the input text if clarity matters.
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- If a word must be emphasized, add an Emphasis line and repeat the word exactly.
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## Pauses and pacing
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- Use punctuation or short line breaks in the input text to create natural pauses.
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- Use the Pauses line for intentional pauses ("pause after the greeting").
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## Iterate deliberately
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- Start with a clean base instruction set, then make one change at a time.
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- Repeat critical constraints on each iteration ("keep pacing steady").
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## Where to find copy/paste recipes
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For copy/paste instruction templates, see `references/sample-prompts.md`. This file focuses on principles, structure, and iteration patterns.
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