I am not interested in running the terminal if voiceover is not 100% no
idea how to even get there.
Are applications normally in the docs?
Something I read from another voiceover source suggested that vo-d just
takes you to the desktop.
Still want to access voiceover help keys and the like, which do not seem
to be terminal associated.
Likewise pages could serve the same typing practice goal.
All of my Linux Ubuntu shell work is via a service, called shellworld,
using my non Linux screen reader.
On Sun, 26 Jun 2022, Jonathan Cohn wrote:
Hello,
If applications are in the dock then pressing the VO-D then the first few
letters of the applications followed by return will launch the application.
Alternatively, you could use the open command in terminal.
open -a textedit
will open and activate the textedit application
open myDocument.txt
will open myDocument.txt in the default application for that file
open -a textedit myDocument.txt
will open myDocument.txt in the textedit application
Here is some more info:
joncohn@speedy ~ %
open: unrecognized option `--help'
Usage: open [-e] [-t] [-f] [-W] [-R] [-n] [-g] [-h] [-s <partial SDK name>][-b <bundle
identifier>] [-a <application>] [-u URL] [filenames] [--args arguments]
Help: Open opens files from a shell.
By default, opens each file using the default application for that file.
If the file is in the form of a URL, the file will be opened as a URL.
Options:
-a Opens with the specified application.
-b Opens with the specified application bundle
identifier.
-e Opens with TextEdit.
-t Opens with default text editor.
-f Reads input from standard input and opens with
TextEdit.
-F --fresh Launches the app fresh, that is, without restoring
windows. Saved persistent state is lost, excluding Untitled documents.
-R, --reveal Selects in the Finder instead of opening.
-W, --wait-apps Blocks until the used applications are closed (even
if they were already running).
--args All remaining arguments are passed in argv to the
application's main() function instead of opened.
-n, --new Open a new instance of the application even if one
is already running.
-j, --hide Launches the app hidden.
-g, --background Does not bring the application to the foreground.
-h, --header Searches header file locations for headers matching
the given filenames, and opens them.
-s For -h, the SDK to use; if supplied, only SDKs whose
names contain the argument value are searched.
Otherwise the highest versioned SDK in each platform
is used.
-u, --url URL Open this URL, even if it matches exactly a filepath
-i, --stdin PATH Launches the application with stdin connected to
PATH; defaults to /dev/null
-o, --stdout PATH Launches the application with /dev/stdout connected
to PATH;
--stderr PATH Launches the application with /dev/stderr connected
to PATH to
--env VAR Add an enviroment variable to the launched process,
where VAR is formatted AAA=foo or just AAA for a null string value.
Jonathan Cohn
On Jun 26, 2022, at 19:57, Karen Lewellen <klewel...@shellworld.net> wrote:
Hi folks,
One thing I am personally finding I seriously need is basic keyboard typing
practice.
On my main computers, because I have been using them for so many years, I am a
swift typist who is very very very used to keeping my hands on the main
keyboard and knowing where I am from a screen reader standpoint as well.
I am personally feeling that some time with either textedit, or pages, will let
me just practice typing with no fear that I will set something off with the mac
itself.
I want to be so solid with my typing that entering my password without input
will be effortless, I doubt I can turn off having to provide his for my apple
ID for example.
so, at this stage, what is the fastest way to load textedit? say using the
menu bar, if that is an option?
I will want to know as well how to keep certain programs I use often either in
the finder, or in the menu, bar, which ever is most practical.
I am used to just typing whatever starts the program, I never used windows at
all.
Ideas?
Kare
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