I dunno. NVDA and Orca are two screen readers actually programmed in
Python, so it's certainly not impossible.
Greg Kearney wrote:
If you are new to programing a better choice might be Perl or Ruby
which do not have such tight requirement about indentation of the code.
I find the indentation of code in python hard and I can see. I can only
imagine how frustration python would be for someone who can't see.
Greg
On Apr 19, 2007, at 17:21 , Rafael Bejarano wrote:
Hi Greg,
Yes, you answered a related question for me on a previous occasion.
What I asked previously was whether there was a text editor that was
compatible with VO. Your suggestion to use Smultron was very helpful,
and, indeed, I've found Smultron quite useful for writing small
programs and saving them with the .py extension that allows the python
launcher to run them.
What I'm trying to determine now, however, is whether there is an
application that will also let me run python programs, in addition to
allowing me to write and save them in a format that the python
launcher can open. Maybe there's a way to run python programs from
within Smultron and I just haven't figured out how to do so. After
all, I am new to programming, so I may be missing something obvious.
If you know how to run programs from within Smultron, please let me
know. I would be grateful for the help.
Thanks.
Rafael
On Apr 19, 2007, at 5:14 PM, Greg Kearney wrote:
I know that Smultron supports Python and is compatible with
VoiceOver. didn't I answer this question once before for someone?
Greg Kearney
On Apr 19, 2007, at 16:10 , Rafael Bejarano wrote:
Hello,
I have a question for those of you who program on the Mac. Can you
suggest an IDE that (a) is compatible with VO and (b) can be used to
program in python? Any suggestions would be highly appreciated.
Cordially,
Rafael Bejarano