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75<h1><a href="speech_v1.html">Cloud Speech-to-Text API</a> . <a href="speech_v1.projects.html">projects</a> . <a href="speech_v1.projects.locations.html">locations</a> . <a href="speech_v1.projects.locations.phraseSets.html">phraseSets</a></h1>
76<h2>Instance Methods</h2>
77<p class="toc_element">
78  <code><a href="#close">close()</a></code></p>
79<p class="firstline">Close httplib2 connections.</p>
80<p class="toc_element">
81  <code><a href="#create">create(parent, body=None, x__xgafv=None)</a></code></p>
82<p class="firstline">Create a set of phrase hints. Each item in the set can be a single word or a multi-word phrase. The items in the PhraseSet are favored by the recognition model when you send a call that includes the PhraseSet.</p>
83<p class="toc_element">
84  <code><a href="#delete">delete(name, x__xgafv=None)</a></code></p>
85<p class="firstline">Delete a phrase set.</p>
86<p class="toc_element">
87  <code><a href="#get">get(name, x__xgafv=None)</a></code></p>
88<p class="firstline">Get a phrase set.</p>
89<p class="toc_element">
90  <code><a href="#list">list(parent, pageSize=None, pageToken=None, x__xgafv=None)</a></code></p>
91<p class="firstline">List phrase sets.</p>
92<p class="toc_element">
93  <code><a href="#list_next">list_next(previous_request, previous_response)</a></code></p>
94<p class="firstline">Retrieves the next page of results.</p>
95<p class="toc_element">
96  <code><a href="#patch">patch(name, body=None, updateMask=None, x__xgafv=None)</a></code></p>
97<p class="firstline">Update a phrase set.</p>
98<h3>Method Details</h3>
99<div class="method">
100    <code class="details" id="close">close()</code>
101  <pre>Close httplib2 connections.</pre>
102</div>
103
104<div class="method">
105    <code class="details" id="create">create(parent, body=None, x__xgafv=None)</code>
106  <pre>Create a set of phrase hints. Each item in the set can be a single word or a multi-word phrase. The items in the PhraseSet are favored by the recognition model when you send a call that includes the PhraseSet.
107
108Args:
109  parent: string, Required. The parent resource where this phrase set will be created. Format: `projects/{project}/locations/{location}/phraseSets` Speech-to-Text supports three locations: `global`, `us` (US North America), and `eu` (Europe). If you are calling the `speech.googleapis.com` endpoint, use the `global` location. To specify a region, use a [regional endpoint](/speech-to-text/docs/endpoints) with matching `us` or `eu` location value. (required)
110  body: object, The request body.
111    The object takes the form of:
112
113{ # Message sent by the client for the `CreatePhraseSet` method.
114  &quot;phraseSet&quot;: { # Provides &quot;hints&quot; to the speech recognizer to favor specific words and phrases in the results. # Required. The phrase set to create.
115    &quot;boost&quot;: 3.14, # Hint Boost. Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost, the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative boost values would correspond to anti-biasing. Anti-biasing is not enabled, so negative boost will simply be ignored. Though `boost` can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 (exclusive) and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case. Speech recognition will skip PhraseSets with a boost value of 0.
116    &quot;name&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # The resource name of the phrase set.
117    &quot;phrases&quot;: [ # A list of word and phrases.
118      { # A phrases containing words and phrase &quot;hints&quot; so that the speech recognition is more likely to recognize them. This can be used to improve the accuracy for specific words and phrases, for example, if specific commands are typically spoken by the user. This can also be used to add additional words to the vocabulary of the recognizer. See [usage limits](https://cloud.google.com/speech-to-text/quotas#content). List items can also include pre-built or custom classes containing groups of words that represent common concepts that occur in natural language. For example, rather than providing a phrase hint for every month of the year (e.g. &quot;i was born in january&quot;, &quot;i was born in febuary&quot;, ...), use the pre-built `$MONTH` class improves the likelihood of correctly transcribing audio that includes months (e.g. &quot;i was born in $month&quot;). To refer to pre-built classes, use the class&#x27; symbol prepended with `$` e.g. `$MONTH`. To refer to custom classes that were defined inline in the request, set the class&#x27;s `custom_class_id` to a string unique to all class resources and inline classes. Then use the class&#x27; id wrapped in $`{...}` e.g. &quot;${my-months}&quot;. To refer to custom classes resources, use the class&#x27; id wrapped in `${}` (e.g. `${my-months}`). Speech-to-Text supports three locations: `global`, `us` (US North America), and `eu` (Europe). If you are calling the `speech.googleapis.com` endpoint, use the `global` location. To specify a region, use a [regional endpoint](/speech-to-text/docs/endpoints) with matching `us` or `eu` location value.
119        &quot;boost&quot;: 3.14, # Hint Boost. Overrides the boost set at the phrase set level. Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost, the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative boost will simply be ignored. Though `boost` can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case. Speech recognition will skip PhraseSets with a boost value of 0.
120        &quot;value&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # The phrase itself.
121      },
122    ],
123  },
124  &quot;phraseSetId&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # Required. The ID to use for the phrase set, which will become the final component of the phrase set&#x27;s resource name. This value should be 4-63 characters, and valid characters are /a-z-/.
125}
126
127  x__xgafv: string, V1 error format.
128    Allowed values
129      1 - v1 error format
130      2 - v2 error format
131
132Returns:
133  An object of the form:
134
135    { # Provides &quot;hints&quot; to the speech recognizer to favor specific words and phrases in the results.
136  &quot;boost&quot;: 3.14, # Hint Boost. Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost, the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative boost values would correspond to anti-biasing. Anti-biasing is not enabled, so negative boost will simply be ignored. Though `boost` can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 (exclusive) and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case. Speech recognition will skip PhraseSets with a boost value of 0.
137  &quot;name&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # The resource name of the phrase set.
138  &quot;phrases&quot;: [ # A list of word and phrases.
139    { # A phrases containing words and phrase &quot;hints&quot; so that the speech recognition is more likely to recognize them. This can be used to improve the accuracy for specific words and phrases, for example, if specific commands are typically spoken by the user. This can also be used to add additional words to the vocabulary of the recognizer. See [usage limits](https://cloud.google.com/speech-to-text/quotas#content). List items can also include pre-built or custom classes containing groups of words that represent common concepts that occur in natural language. For example, rather than providing a phrase hint for every month of the year (e.g. &quot;i was born in january&quot;, &quot;i was born in febuary&quot;, ...), use the pre-built `$MONTH` class improves the likelihood of correctly transcribing audio that includes months (e.g. &quot;i was born in $month&quot;). To refer to pre-built classes, use the class&#x27; symbol prepended with `$` e.g. `$MONTH`. To refer to custom classes that were defined inline in the request, set the class&#x27;s `custom_class_id` to a string unique to all class resources and inline classes. Then use the class&#x27; id wrapped in $`{...}` e.g. &quot;${my-months}&quot;. To refer to custom classes resources, use the class&#x27; id wrapped in `${}` (e.g. `${my-months}`). Speech-to-Text supports three locations: `global`, `us` (US North America), and `eu` (Europe). If you are calling the `speech.googleapis.com` endpoint, use the `global` location. To specify a region, use a [regional endpoint](/speech-to-text/docs/endpoints) with matching `us` or `eu` location value.
140      &quot;boost&quot;: 3.14, # Hint Boost. Overrides the boost set at the phrase set level. Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost, the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative boost will simply be ignored. Though `boost` can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case. Speech recognition will skip PhraseSets with a boost value of 0.
141      &quot;value&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # The phrase itself.
142    },
143  ],
144}</pre>
145</div>
146
147<div class="method">
148    <code class="details" id="delete">delete(name, x__xgafv=None)</code>
149  <pre>Delete a phrase set.
150
151Args:
152  name: string, Required. The name of the phrase set to delete. Format: `projects/{project}/locations/{location}/phraseSets/{phrase_set}` (required)
153  x__xgafv: string, V1 error format.
154    Allowed values
155      1 - v1 error format
156      2 - v2 error format
157
158Returns:
159  An object of the form:
160
161    { # A generic empty message that you can re-use to avoid defining duplicated empty messages in your APIs. A typical example is to use it as the request or the response type of an API method. For instance: service Foo { rpc Bar(google.protobuf.Empty) returns (google.protobuf.Empty); } The JSON representation for `Empty` is empty JSON object `{}`.
162}</pre>
163</div>
164
165<div class="method">
166    <code class="details" id="get">get(name, x__xgafv=None)</code>
167  <pre>Get a phrase set.
168
169Args:
170  name: string, Required. The name of the phrase set to retrieve. Format: `projects/{project}/locations/{location}/phraseSets/{phrase_set}` Speech-to-Text supports three locations: `global`, `us` (US North America), and `eu` (Europe). If you are calling the `speech.googleapis.com` endpoint, use the `global` location. To specify a region, use a [regional endpoint](/speech-to-text/docs/endpoints) with matching `us` or `eu` location value. (required)
171  x__xgafv: string, V1 error format.
172    Allowed values
173      1 - v1 error format
174      2 - v2 error format
175
176Returns:
177  An object of the form:
178
179    { # Provides &quot;hints&quot; to the speech recognizer to favor specific words and phrases in the results.
180  &quot;boost&quot;: 3.14, # Hint Boost. Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost, the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative boost values would correspond to anti-biasing. Anti-biasing is not enabled, so negative boost will simply be ignored. Though `boost` can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 (exclusive) and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case. Speech recognition will skip PhraseSets with a boost value of 0.
181  &quot;name&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # The resource name of the phrase set.
182  &quot;phrases&quot;: [ # A list of word and phrases.
183    { # A phrases containing words and phrase &quot;hints&quot; so that the speech recognition is more likely to recognize them. This can be used to improve the accuracy for specific words and phrases, for example, if specific commands are typically spoken by the user. This can also be used to add additional words to the vocabulary of the recognizer. See [usage limits](https://cloud.google.com/speech-to-text/quotas#content). List items can also include pre-built or custom classes containing groups of words that represent common concepts that occur in natural language. For example, rather than providing a phrase hint for every month of the year (e.g. &quot;i was born in january&quot;, &quot;i was born in febuary&quot;, ...), use the pre-built `$MONTH` class improves the likelihood of correctly transcribing audio that includes months (e.g. &quot;i was born in $month&quot;). To refer to pre-built classes, use the class&#x27; symbol prepended with `$` e.g. `$MONTH`. To refer to custom classes that were defined inline in the request, set the class&#x27;s `custom_class_id` to a string unique to all class resources and inline classes. Then use the class&#x27; id wrapped in $`{...}` e.g. &quot;${my-months}&quot;. To refer to custom classes resources, use the class&#x27; id wrapped in `${}` (e.g. `${my-months}`). Speech-to-Text supports three locations: `global`, `us` (US North America), and `eu` (Europe). If you are calling the `speech.googleapis.com` endpoint, use the `global` location. To specify a region, use a [regional endpoint](/speech-to-text/docs/endpoints) with matching `us` or `eu` location value.
184      &quot;boost&quot;: 3.14, # Hint Boost. Overrides the boost set at the phrase set level. Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost, the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative boost will simply be ignored. Though `boost` can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case. Speech recognition will skip PhraseSets with a boost value of 0.
185      &quot;value&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # The phrase itself.
186    },
187  ],
188}</pre>
189</div>
190
191<div class="method">
192    <code class="details" id="list">list(parent, pageSize=None, pageToken=None, x__xgafv=None)</code>
193  <pre>List phrase sets.
194
195Args:
196  parent: string, Required. The parent, which owns this collection of phrase set. Format: `projects/{project}/locations/{location}` Speech-to-Text supports three locations: `global`, `us` (US North America), and `eu` (Europe). If you are calling the `speech.googleapis.com` endpoint, use the `global` location. To specify a region, use a [regional endpoint](/speech-to-text/docs/endpoints) with matching `us` or `eu` location value. (required)
197  pageSize: integer, The maximum number of phrase sets to return. The service may return fewer than this value. If unspecified, at most 50 phrase sets will be returned. The maximum value is 1000; values above 1000 will be coerced to 1000.
198  pageToken: string, A page token, received from a previous `ListPhraseSet` call. Provide this to retrieve the subsequent page. When paginating, all other parameters provided to `ListPhraseSet` must match the call that provided the page token.
199  x__xgafv: string, V1 error format.
200    Allowed values
201      1 - v1 error format
202      2 - v2 error format
203
204Returns:
205  An object of the form:
206
207    { # Message returned to the client by the `ListPhraseSet` method.
208  &quot;nextPageToken&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # A token, which can be sent as `page_token` to retrieve the next page. If this field is omitted, there are no subsequent pages.
209  &quot;phraseSets&quot;: [ # The phrase set.
210    { # Provides &quot;hints&quot; to the speech recognizer to favor specific words and phrases in the results.
211      &quot;boost&quot;: 3.14, # Hint Boost. Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost, the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative boost values would correspond to anti-biasing. Anti-biasing is not enabled, so negative boost will simply be ignored. Though `boost` can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 (exclusive) and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case. Speech recognition will skip PhraseSets with a boost value of 0.
212      &quot;name&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # The resource name of the phrase set.
213      &quot;phrases&quot;: [ # A list of word and phrases.
214        { # A phrases containing words and phrase &quot;hints&quot; so that the speech recognition is more likely to recognize them. This can be used to improve the accuracy for specific words and phrases, for example, if specific commands are typically spoken by the user. This can also be used to add additional words to the vocabulary of the recognizer. See [usage limits](https://cloud.google.com/speech-to-text/quotas#content). List items can also include pre-built or custom classes containing groups of words that represent common concepts that occur in natural language. For example, rather than providing a phrase hint for every month of the year (e.g. &quot;i was born in january&quot;, &quot;i was born in febuary&quot;, ...), use the pre-built `$MONTH` class improves the likelihood of correctly transcribing audio that includes months (e.g. &quot;i was born in $month&quot;). To refer to pre-built classes, use the class&#x27; symbol prepended with `$` e.g. `$MONTH`. To refer to custom classes that were defined inline in the request, set the class&#x27;s `custom_class_id` to a string unique to all class resources and inline classes. Then use the class&#x27; id wrapped in $`{...}` e.g. &quot;${my-months}&quot;. To refer to custom classes resources, use the class&#x27; id wrapped in `${}` (e.g. `${my-months}`). Speech-to-Text supports three locations: `global`, `us` (US North America), and `eu` (Europe). If you are calling the `speech.googleapis.com` endpoint, use the `global` location. To specify a region, use a [regional endpoint](/speech-to-text/docs/endpoints) with matching `us` or `eu` location value.
215          &quot;boost&quot;: 3.14, # Hint Boost. Overrides the boost set at the phrase set level. Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost, the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative boost will simply be ignored. Though `boost` can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case. Speech recognition will skip PhraseSets with a boost value of 0.
216          &quot;value&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # The phrase itself.
217        },
218      ],
219    },
220  ],
221}</pre>
222</div>
223
224<div class="method">
225    <code class="details" id="list_next">list_next(previous_request, previous_response)</code>
226  <pre>Retrieves the next page of results.
227
228Args:
229  previous_request: The request for the previous page. (required)
230  previous_response: The response from the request for the previous page. (required)
231
232Returns:
233  A request object that you can call &#x27;execute()&#x27; on to request the next
234  page. Returns None if there are no more items in the collection.
235    </pre>
236</div>
237
238<div class="method">
239    <code class="details" id="patch">patch(name, body=None, updateMask=None, x__xgafv=None)</code>
240  <pre>Update a phrase set.
241
242Args:
243  name: string, The resource name of the phrase set. (required)
244  body: object, The request body.
245    The object takes the form of:
246
247{ # Provides &quot;hints&quot; to the speech recognizer to favor specific words and phrases in the results.
248  &quot;boost&quot;: 3.14, # Hint Boost. Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost, the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative boost values would correspond to anti-biasing. Anti-biasing is not enabled, so negative boost will simply be ignored. Though `boost` can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 (exclusive) and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case. Speech recognition will skip PhraseSets with a boost value of 0.
249  &quot;name&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # The resource name of the phrase set.
250  &quot;phrases&quot;: [ # A list of word and phrases.
251    { # A phrases containing words and phrase &quot;hints&quot; so that the speech recognition is more likely to recognize them. This can be used to improve the accuracy for specific words and phrases, for example, if specific commands are typically spoken by the user. This can also be used to add additional words to the vocabulary of the recognizer. See [usage limits](https://cloud.google.com/speech-to-text/quotas#content). List items can also include pre-built or custom classes containing groups of words that represent common concepts that occur in natural language. For example, rather than providing a phrase hint for every month of the year (e.g. &quot;i was born in january&quot;, &quot;i was born in febuary&quot;, ...), use the pre-built `$MONTH` class improves the likelihood of correctly transcribing audio that includes months (e.g. &quot;i was born in $month&quot;). To refer to pre-built classes, use the class&#x27; symbol prepended with `$` e.g. `$MONTH`. To refer to custom classes that were defined inline in the request, set the class&#x27;s `custom_class_id` to a string unique to all class resources and inline classes. Then use the class&#x27; id wrapped in $`{...}` e.g. &quot;${my-months}&quot;. To refer to custom classes resources, use the class&#x27; id wrapped in `${}` (e.g. `${my-months}`). Speech-to-Text supports three locations: `global`, `us` (US North America), and `eu` (Europe). If you are calling the `speech.googleapis.com` endpoint, use the `global` location. To specify a region, use a [regional endpoint](/speech-to-text/docs/endpoints) with matching `us` or `eu` location value.
252      &quot;boost&quot;: 3.14, # Hint Boost. Overrides the boost set at the phrase set level. Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost, the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative boost will simply be ignored. Though `boost` can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case. Speech recognition will skip PhraseSets with a boost value of 0.
253      &quot;value&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # The phrase itself.
254    },
255  ],
256}
257
258  updateMask: string, The list of fields to be updated.
259  x__xgafv: string, V1 error format.
260    Allowed values
261      1 - v1 error format
262      2 - v2 error format
263
264Returns:
265  An object of the form:
266
267    { # Provides &quot;hints&quot; to the speech recognizer to favor specific words and phrases in the results.
268  &quot;boost&quot;: 3.14, # Hint Boost. Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost, the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative boost values would correspond to anti-biasing. Anti-biasing is not enabled, so negative boost will simply be ignored. Though `boost` can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 (exclusive) and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case. Speech recognition will skip PhraseSets with a boost value of 0.
269  &quot;name&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # The resource name of the phrase set.
270  &quot;phrases&quot;: [ # A list of word and phrases.
271    { # A phrases containing words and phrase &quot;hints&quot; so that the speech recognition is more likely to recognize them. This can be used to improve the accuracy for specific words and phrases, for example, if specific commands are typically spoken by the user. This can also be used to add additional words to the vocabulary of the recognizer. See [usage limits](https://cloud.google.com/speech-to-text/quotas#content). List items can also include pre-built or custom classes containing groups of words that represent common concepts that occur in natural language. For example, rather than providing a phrase hint for every month of the year (e.g. &quot;i was born in january&quot;, &quot;i was born in febuary&quot;, ...), use the pre-built `$MONTH` class improves the likelihood of correctly transcribing audio that includes months (e.g. &quot;i was born in $month&quot;). To refer to pre-built classes, use the class&#x27; symbol prepended with `$` e.g. `$MONTH`. To refer to custom classes that were defined inline in the request, set the class&#x27;s `custom_class_id` to a string unique to all class resources and inline classes. Then use the class&#x27; id wrapped in $`{...}` e.g. &quot;${my-months}&quot;. To refer to custom classes resources, use the class&#x27; id wrapped in `${}` (e.g. `${my-months}`). Speech-to-Text supports three locations: `global`, `us` (US North America), and `eu` (Europe). If you are calling the `speech.googleapis.com` endpoint, use the `global` location. To specify a region, use a [regional endpoint](/speech-to-text/docs/endpoints) with matching `us` or `eu` location value.
272      &quot;boost&quot;: 3.14, # Hint Boost. Overrides the boost set at the phrase set level. Positive value will increase the probability that a specific phrase will be recognized over other similar sounding phrases. The higher the boost, the higher the chance of false positive recognition as well. Negative boost will simply be ignored. Though `boost` can accept a wide range of positive values, most use cases are best served with values between 0 and 20. We recommend using a binary search approach to finding the optimal value for your use case. Speech recognition will skip PhraseSets with a boost value of 0.
273      &quot;value&quot;: &quot;A String&quot;, # The phrase itself.
274    },
275  ],
276}</pre>
277</div>
278
279</body></html>