Re: VS IDE Accessibility Tip

  • From: "RicksPlace" <ofbgmail@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 25 May 2010 10:13:51 -0400

A followup test to the initial article. I opened the designer in VB.net, hit f4 
on a button and hit my HotKey to close all open windows except this one.It 
worked except that when the Designer was closed the Properties window no longer 
had any properties for any controls. The property window is associated with a 
form or particular control. So, when the designer was closed focus remained in 
the property window but nothing was loaded in the window. If you had made any 
changes to the properties or the form and clicked Save when the pop up came up 
after clicking the hot key combination all changes were saved but if I wanted 
to continue setting properties for the form that use to be in the designer I 
could not do so. This is not what I wanted. When in the Properties window, if 
you have overlapping problems, you need to close each open window using the 
slow but flexible Alt-w and then close the windows you do not need, everything 
but the Properties Window and the Designer in my case.
Just a note on usage of the new hot key.
Rick USA 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: RicksPlace 
  To: programmingblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Tuesday, May 25, 2010 9:53 AM
  Subject: VS IDE Accessibility Tip


  Hi Guys: 
  Tell me if the following situation is applicable with JAWS or whether JAWS 
handles the following situation 
  automatically when the scripts are installed if you can.
  I am thinking of adding this to the IDE Accessibility Tutorial or starting 
another Tutorial on VS Accessibility Tips for experienced users, after a little 
more testing,  if I find 
  more performance or accessibility tweaks.
  BeginArticle:
  Sometimes when working between windows you click on something in one window 
and are placed in another window. 
  This is the case with the ToolBox and a couple of other windows. In this case 
the first window is not closed and 
  it could cause an issue with a screen reader. If you have done this several 
times you might have several windows 
  open or hidden but with their labels docked on your WorkSpace. It is not a 
major problem unless you get some 
  overlapping which can cause problems with a screen reader. 
  There are several ways to close hidden, docked or floating, Windows:
  1: Hit Alt+w then L to close all open windows. This is good when you want a 
clean workspace.
  Drawback, it closes the window you might want to work in as well and you 
would have to open that window manually 
  again.
  2: You Alt+W and close each Window listed in the Open Windows list except the 
one you want and then click that 
  window to put focus on it.
  Drawback, slow, slow, slow but it works.
  3: Use the mouse, In Windoweyes, to right click the File Tab on the File Tab 
Channel you are working on and 
  select "Close All But This".
  DrawBack, Finding that dockable name can be tricky. but this method is 
extremely fast for sighted users.
  4: Set up a Shortcut to close all but the Active Window.
  Draback, None I have seen so far but I am still playing with it.
  If you want to set up a Shortcut or HotKey for any of the unassigned 
functions available in the IDE, and there 
  are many very interesting ones from an accessibility perspective,  the 
process is the same as described below for 

  setting up this HotKey:
  1: Hit Alt to open the Menu Bar, Hit Options under the Tool Menu to bring up 
the Options window with the Options 
  TreeView.
  2: Expand the Environment node if not expanded, hit k to be taken to the 
Keyboard Tab Group.
  Tab over to the textBox labeled  "Show Commands Containing" and type in the 
word "close".
  Tab to the list of IDE Features that will be listed related to the word 
"close". You will see some might be 
  assigned a Key  Combination by default and some not.
   cursor down to  "File.CloseAllButThis".
  Tab and make sure the Use In ListBox is set to "Global".
  Tab and in the box that says "Press ShortCutKeys I pressed "Alt" 
"RightWindows" and  "e".
  visible, tabbed back to "Assign" and pressed it. Then I tabbed to OK and 
pressed it.
  Note, if the key combination you try to use is already used you will get a 
message in another box in the tab 
  group telling you it is in use and by which IDE Feature. I saw that message 
after I had clicked the Assign button 

  but it may be there after you just press the key combination. If it is there 
nothing gets changed or updated 
  after you press the assign button until you change the key combination to one 
that is not already in use and click the OK button.
  If you change your mind later, just repeat the process but click the "Remove" 
button and ok to UnAssign your hot 
  key. Nothing else will be changed or removed. Only your new hot key 
combination will be removed but all the 
  entries of features including the "Close All But This" will still be in the 
list of IDE features since they are 
  supplied by Microsoft and whatever you do that list will not be modified as 
far as I know.
  When I used the new Hot Key combination the only surprise was that with 
several windows open when I clicked the 
  hot key a pop up came up asking me if I wanted to save the changes. I clicked 
yes, I had made changes in the 
  Properties window and added a control to a form and was in the form with 
focus on the added control, after I 
  clicked yes the work space was cleared and I was still in the form with focus 
on the control I was working on, 
  ready to continue working in the Designer which is exactly what I wanted to 
happen.
  Remember this is not used in every situation. If I had hit f4 while in the 
Designer to set some properties and 
  executed close all But this, the designer might have been closed and I would 
have to open it after I closed the 
  properties window before continuing to work in the designer.
  So this is just another tool in your performance quiver.
  Knowing, or enabling, development tools is the diference between keeping up 
and falling behind in any programming 
  environment. EndArticle:
  Rick USA

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