I think that for the best example of touch screen interaction, Android probably
is the best bet. All the API's that matter are open source, and although not all
versions of the Talkback screen reader have their source code released, full
source code is in fact available for new enough versions t
Hello,
El 22/3/2019 a las 08:47, Dave Mielke escribió:
> [quoted lines by Samuel Thibault on 2019/03/22 at 12:31 +0100]
>
>> Which kind of interaction do you have? AIUI the current support on
>> Linux is that it can trigger clicks, but do you mean that a different
>> mode of interaction would all
Ok, I have added it to the list as well.
Samuel
___
gnome-accessibility-list mailing list
gnome-accessibility-list@gnome.org
https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gnome-accessibility-list
[quoted lines by Samuel Thibault on 2019/03/22 at 12:31 +0100]
>Which kind of interaction do you have? AIUI the current support on
>Linux is that it can trigger clicks, but do you mean that a different
>mode of interaction would allow to check what widget you have before
>clicking, for instance?
am using windows and I have a touch screen, with NVDA. It
>> has support for it and sometimes it is faster to interact with controls
>> using it in place of keyboard.
>>
>> However, I didn't found any library for touchscreen interaction, and
>> orca will need a rede
gt; using it in place of keyboard.
>
> However, I didn't found any library for touchscreen interaction, and
> orca will need a redesign from the ground to support it appropriately.
Which kind of interaction do you have? AIUI the current support on
Linux is that it can trigger c
brary for touchscreen interaction, and
orca will need a redesign from the ground to support it appropriately.
Are there any plans about these things?
Cheers,
--
Cuando tus fuerzas terminan, las de mi Dios comienzan.
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital sign