[program-l] Re: SQL Integration Services and accesibility

  • From: "Rick Thomas" <ofbgmail@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <program-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Fri, 3 Apr 2015 04:38:09 -0400

Hi Jeff: Good to hear from you again.

I understand there is good cash to be made in this field and my guess is
that someone will have something to help, wish I could but not in my
wheelhouse unfortunately.

This is one of those fields where a good person can make close to a 6 figure
salary with some experience and should be accessible to blind folks but, as
you mention, there might be a little accessibility tweaking required for
some of the software.

But there are some accessibility folks out there and I hope they have
something since this is an excellent field to be in for those blind folks
willing and able to tackle this set of technicals - the best greenies
available are in this arena me thinks.

Now this is an excellent posting and think it worth a response even though I
don't have much to add - sorry again but if you and, or, a few others can
manage it this is an excellent opportunity for some of the more advanced
blind professionals to advance into really big money jobs for their
families!

Rick USA



From: program-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:program-l-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]
On Behalf Of Jeff Durham
Sent: Thursday, April 2, 2015 6:43 PM
To: program-l@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [program-l] SQL Integration Services and accesibility



Good afternoon,

I am attempting to start learning Microsoft SQL Server Integration Services
(SSIS) with the SQL Data Tools for Visual Studio 2013user interface. The
problem I have run into is with creating precedence constraints, which
determine which task will execute next depending on whether the previous
task ran successfully or returned an error, kind of like how a flow chart
works. The training materials I have come across show how to create
precedence constraints by dragging the green arrow pointing down from task
A, say, to either Task B or C or any other task which is to run depending on
the status of Task A. Jaws does not seem to recognize these arrows and I
have not seen how this can be accomplished with keyboard shortcuts. I know
you can create paths between data flow components by using the add path
dialog box in the data flow designer, but I have not seen such a dialog box
for creating precedence constraints in the control flow designer. Has anyone
created SSIS packages using Visual Studio 2013, or know whether Jaws
scripts have been developed for using the SSIS designer? This is very
different than the design surface for creating winforms or webforms
applications, so even if there are Jaws scripts for Visual studio 2013 that
work in the webforms or winforms designers, they will not work in the SSIS
package designer.

This would really help.

Thank you,

Jeff



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