RE: Reply to sender

  • From: "Nicol Oosthuizen" <NOosthuizen@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Wed, 24 Jan 2007 11:37:27 +0200

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----
HI 
I would like to make a small correction, chris if you don't mind.
First of all me personally  I'm using windows+r.
ON the one hand it is a good thing not to use control+shift+r for reply
directly to sender, because say for instance you want to reply  to a
group of people which is not a list?
But the correction I want to make is: jaws shouldn't allow outlook to
use control+shift+r if you have assigned control+shift+r to reply
directly to sender. This is one of the rules of jaws keystrokes.  IN
jaws there's a function called key pressed event. The moment you press
any key or combination of keys, this function gets triggered and then it
checks if there's any jaws script assigned to this  keystroke. If so,
the jaws script assigned to it will execute. If no jaws script is
assigned, then only it will pass through the key to the  application
whether the  application is using the keystroke or not.
But jaws isn't suppose to allow the application to use a keystroke if a
script is assigned to  it. Only if no script is assigned to the
keystroke, its passed through to the application.
But alt+r is also a good  keystroke to use for reply directly to  sender
because there's no function in outlook or OE using alt+r and there's no
menu in outlook activated with alt+r.

-----Original Message-----
From: jfw-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:jfw-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of Chris Jenkins
Sent: 24 January 2007 12:35 AM
To: jfw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: RE: Reply to sender

Hello Roger.

The problems that you have seen is the very reason I would suggest to
not
use "control + shift + R" because this particular keystroke is already
assigned to something in Microsoft Outlook.  As a matter of fact this
particular keystroke is assigned to the reply to all feature of
Microsoft
Outlook as you noticed.  I don't know why this is so complicated for
every
one.  The way I see it is not complicated at all.  You should open
Microsoft
Outlook, open keyboard manager, find the reply to all script in keyboard
manager, and apply your keystroke.  Your keystroke should be something
that
is not a keystroke that is active in the program you are trying to use.

For every one that is testing this why not just check the two field once
you
do the reply and before you send the message so you can see where the
message will go?--
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