Hi :)
Hmmm, i meant the java 6u21 is best for LibreOffice generally and only for 
versions of LO that are prior to the 3.5.0 release.  It's also only from what 
people have said on the Users List.  Only 1 or 2 people did any extensive 
testing so it's not exactly a water-tight report based on extensive, rigorously 
testing!  

No-one on the Accessibility List has mentioned about 1 version being better 
than another so far.  So, we have even less to go on but it might be worth a 
try if it's easy.  
Regards from
Tom :)


--- On Thu, 9/2/12, Christophe Strobbe <[email protected]> 
wrote:

From: Christophe Strobbe <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [libreoffice-accessibility] configuring libreoffice for 
accessibility
To: [email protected]
Date: Thursday, 9 February, 2012, 14:18

Hi Tom,

At 23:38 8-2-2012, Tom Davies wrote:
> Apparently the best version of java is the 6u21 version. The 20 and 22 are 
> next best.

Do you mean that Java 6u21 is best for LibreOffice in general or does the Java 
version also have an impact on accessibility? (I would not know why it would 
have an impact but I'm asking just in case it does.)


> After 24 LO might run into problems unless you are using LO 3.5.0 which is 
> still not yet officially released but you might be able to use the 
> pre-release.  The 3.5.0 can use java 7 at last.
> 
> Hopefully whichever java you are using is working fine but if there are 
> difficulties then checking the jave version might help
> 
> Tools - Options - Java

Yes, on Windows and Linux. I learnt recently that on Mac OS, there are no 
"Options..." under Tools; you need to go to LibreOffice -> Preferences... But I 
digress, since this was a Windows question.

Best regards,

Christophe


> Regards from
> Tom :)
> 
> --- On Wed, 8/2/12, Christophe Strobbe <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> From: Christophe Strobbe <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [libreoffice-accessibility] configuring libreoffice for 
> accessibility
> To: [email protected]
> Date: Wednesday, 8 February, 2012, 19:58
> 
> Hello Don,
> 
> Some configuration is necessary, but:
> 1) I don't know how easy they are to undertake with a screen reader, and
> 2) the benefit may not be what you expect.
> 
> My comment about the benefit of the configuration is that LibreOffice 
> accessibility on Windows relies on Java Accessibility, which is not very well 
> supported by screen readers. For better results, LibreOffice would need a 
> different accessibility system called IAccessible2, but as long as 
> OpenOffice.org has not integrated this, LibreOffice can't or won't integrate 
> IAccessible2 either (in order to avoid duplication of the same work).
> 
> Now to the configuration:
> 1. First, you need Java and the Java Access Bridge, which you already have. 
> However, if there is more than one Java Runtime Environment on your machine, 
> you need to make sure that the Access Bridge is installed in the Runtime used 
> by LibreOffice, or in all your Java Runtime environments. You can check which 
> Runtime LibreOffice is using by going to the Options dialog (go to Tools 
> menu, then Options) and navigating to the Java pane; you need to wait a few 
> seconds while LibreOffice fetches the info about the available runtimes. The 
> list of runtimes also says if the Access Bridge is installed in them. (If the 
> text next to the vendor and version info says: "with accessibility support", 
> then the runtime has the Access Bridge.)
> 2. After checking the runtimes and the Access Bridge, you need go to 
> "Accessibility" in the Options dialog (it is the item above or before Java). 
> The Accessibility pane contains a checkbox that says: "Support assistive 
> technology tools (restart required)". You need to check this and restart 
> LibreOffice.
> 
> However, because of the lacking support for Java Accessibility in screen 
> readers, some people use IBM Lotus Symphony instead. Lotus Symphony uses 
> IAccessible2 instead of Java Accessibility; it is free but not open source.
> Some people have compared JAWS and NVDA for accessing LibreOffice and found 
> NVDA somewhat better. You can download NVDA for free; if you use the portable 
> version, you can even run it from a USB stick or your hard disk without an 
> installation procedure (some unpacking is needed, but nothing more).
> 
> I hope this helps.
> 
> Best regards,
> 
> Christophe
> 
> 
> At 19:45 8-2-2012, Don Raikes wrote:
> > I ma using jaws 13.0.638 (beta), windows7 64-bit jdk 1.7.0U02 with 
> > accessbridge 2.0.2, and I downloaded and installed libreoffice 3.4.5 
> > yesterday.
> >
> > After the installation completed, I tried using the libreoffice calc 
> > program but jaws didn't read anything in the spreadsheet. I couldn't even 
> > tell that I was in a spreadsheet.
> >
> > Also jaws does not seem to be reading the menus properly, nor is it reading 
> > any of the buttons in the tools -> options dialog.
> >
> > Are there any things I need to do to configure libreoffice for 
> > accessibility?
> 
> 
> -- Christophe Strobbe


-- Christophe Strobbe
K.U.Leuven - Dept. of Electrical Engineering - SCD
Research Group on Document Architectures
Kasteelpark Arenberg 10 bus 2442
B-3001 Leuven-Heverlee
BELGIUM
tel: +32 16 32 85 51
http://www.docarch.be/
Twitter: @RabelaisA11y
---
Open source for accessibility: results from the AEGIS project 
www.aegis-project.eu
---
Please don't invite me to Facebook, Quechup or other "social networks". You may 
have agreed to their "privacy policy", but I haven't.


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