Hello, I’m not sure if this would work. I started taking a database class for 
college and most of the things that we do now I am unable to read unless they 
are copied into the notepad and pasted into a word document so I was just 
curious if there was anything for Linux. 

Ashley Breger

> On May 1, 2022, at 3:44 PM, Linux for blind general discussion 
> <blinux-list@redhat.com> wrote:
> 
> 
>> 
>> On May 1, 2022, at 12:11,Ashley Breger wrote:
>> 
>> ... I am looking for an accessible SQL program to use on my Slint system. ...
> 
> tl;dr - no real answers, but some questions and ideas...
> 
> I'm assuming that you're referring to SQL, a language for interacting with 
> relational databases (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQL).  If not, please 
> indicate what else you have in mind.
> 
> There are lots of databases that support SQL, though the features and 
> syntactic details can vary a lot.  However, most of them have a command-line 
> interface which you can use to submit SQL queries, etc.  So, they should be 
> pretty blind-accessible, at least on the input side.
> 
> Output is another question.  Because relational databases operate on 
> rectangular tables, they tend to use text-based formatting to delineate rows 
> and columns.  So, for example, you might get long strings of spaces and 
> vertical bars such as this:
> 
> |   foo |   bar |   baz |
> |   123 |   456 |   789 |
> |  1234 |  4567 |  7890 |
> 
> Unless you have a screen reader that can let you navigate this sort of thing, 
> finding the relevant table cells could be pretty tedious.
> 
> Of course, with a sufficiently clever query, you can (sometimes :-) pare down 
> the output to just a few cells.  I do something like this when writing 
> debugging trace code, to avoid having to dig through large piles of output.
> 
> One thought I have had, from time to time, is that it would be nice to have 
> tooling that transforms various tabular output formats into HTML tables.  
> This could let the user employ screen reader navigation to crawl around the 
> table.  However, I have no idea if anything of this sort exists.
> 
> Assuming that there are some blind-accessible spreadsheet programs, you might 
> be able to dump the tabular output into a file (e.g. CSV) and then examine it 
> using the spreadsheet program.  Might this work for you?
> 
> - Rich Morin
> 
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