[macvoiceover] Re: Tip for Snow Leopard: When Moving the Cursor

  • From: "Sara" <push649@xxxxxxx>
  • To: <macvoiceover@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 28 Aug 2009 20:17:26 -0500

That's great! Thanks!
Sara
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Blake Sinnett 
  To: macvoiceover@xxxxxxxxxxxxx ; macvisionaries@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Friday, August 28, 2009 8:04 PM
  Subject: [macvoiceover] Tip for Snow Leopard: When Moving the Cursor


  Hello all,
   
  For you ex-Windows users, Snow leopard has a feature that just might make 
your lives a little easier.
   
  If you're used to editing a document in Windows, you'll be used to the screen 
readers for that platform speaking everything to the right of the insertion 
point. VoiceOver's default behavior, however, speaks characters the insertion 
point passes. If you were at the top of a document and the first word was 
VoiceOver, for example, you would hear the capital V, because the insertion 
point just passed that character. You would hear the capital V again if you 
pressed left arrow, because the insertion point would pass the letter going in 
the opposite direction.
   
  In Snow Leopard, there is now a setting that will speak characters to the 
right of the insertion point.
   

    1.. Open the VoiceOver Utility by pressing VO-F8. 
    2.. When you land in the categories table, press V to get to the verbosity 
category. 
    3.. VO-right arrow twice to the text tab, and VO-space to select it. 
    4.. VO-right arrow until you hear "When Moving the Cursor." 
    5.. VO-right arrow one more time. You should hear "Speak text the cursor 
passes." Press VO-space to open the pop-up button. 
    6.. VO-down arrow to select speak text to the right of the cursor. 
    7.. Press VO-Space to select the option and close the pop-up menu. 
    8.. Press command-Q to quit the VoiceOver Utility.
   
  When you're in a document and move by character, you should now have the more 
familiar Windows screen reader behavior. This might not be to everybody's 
taste, but I thought it might be useful for some.
   
  Thanks,
  Blake

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