This is true, but VO + F2 reads the title of the current window, without having
to listen to a lot of other un-necessary stuff.
- Brad -
On Dec 29, 2019, at 16:58, Jonathan Cohn wrote:
YOU were almost correct… vo lower case w reads the current word, but vo upper W
will read the contents of t
YOU were almost correct… vo lower case w reads the current word, but vo upper W
will read the contents of the window. I am not sure what happens if there is
scrollable text in the window. For example if you are viewing a MacVisionaries
thread with 25 messages, will it read the entire thread or j
👍
- Brad -
> On Dec 28, 2019, at 20:06, 'Tim Kilburn' via MacVisionaries
> wrote:
>
Hi,
Sorry, I stand corrected. Yes, Brad, that is indeed the proper key
combination. I suggested the wrong one. VO-f2 reads the title of the window
in the current application.
Later...
Tim Kilburn
Jam
Hi,
Open the VO Utility, select the Verbosity item from the Categories table (cmd-2
for short), select the Announcements tab and check the item labelled as
"Automatically speak text in dialog boxes". that should do the trick.
Later...
Tim Kilburn
Jamf Certified Tech
Apple Teacher
(with Swift
Hi,
Sorry, I stand corrected. Yes, Brad, that is indeed the proper key
combination. I suggested the wrong one. VO-f2 reads the title of the window
in the current application.
Later...
Tim Kilburn
Jamf Certified Tech
Apple Teacher
(with Swift Playgrounds Recognition)
Fort McMurray, AB Canad
how do you set this up in the vo utility?
thanks.
Lorie
> On Dec 28, 2019, at 3:38 PM, 'Tim Kilburn' via MacVisionaries
> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> To read the title of a windows, press VO-w. To read a dialog, use VO-a, or
> any other VO reading commands such as VO-right/left/up/down. You can als
VO + W reads the item in the VO cursor, which may or may not be the title of
the current window.
I use VO + F2 to read the title of the current window within the active
application.
- Brad -
On Dec 28, 2019, at 15:38, 'Tim Kilburn' via MacVisionaries
wrote:
Hi,
To read the title of a windo
Hi,
To read the title of a windows, press VO-w. To read a dialog, use VO-a, or any
other VO reading commands such as VO-right/left/up/down. You can also set the
system to automatically read dialogs if you prefer. This can be set either
through VO Utility or the MacOS can do it from within Sy
I have a similar question. How does one read a dialogue box and the title of
window like you can in Jaws with insert B please?
> On 28 Dec 2019, at 19:53, 'Devin Prater' via MacVisionaries
> wrote:
>
> You have to put the VOICEOVER cursor where you want to read. I think
> interacting with th
You have to put the VOICEOVER cursor where you want to read. I think
interacting with the text area is good enough, and move it to the spot and
press VOICEOVER + A.
> On Dec 28, 2019, at 1:20 PM, Dave Carlson wrote:
>
>
> Okay, I forgot. I know read all is VO+A. But sometimes that command
>
Okay, I forgot. I know read all is VO+A. But sometimes that command
automatically jumps to the top of a document and reads the entire thing. How do
I read from my current VO position to the end of a document?
Dave Carlson
Engineer, Pioneer, Farfar, Woodworker, Musician, and Oregonian
--
Th
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