Say all from cursor point means something slightly different than
what's name implies. On the web, this is more apparent. Vo cannot
automatically go some places. Mail is text. Web pages are made up of
many things that chop up the text. If you have a web page that is
streight text like the linux guide, it works like it does in mail.
On Nov 2, 2007, at 1:53 AM, Cara Quinn wrote:
Uh, bad design?... lol! I have no idea, and this is a pet peave
of mine. I have no idea why someone didn't catch this in testing.
it really irks me too...
Smiles,
Cara :)
On Nov 1, 2007, at 10:19 PM, VaShaun Jones wrote:
OK then why does it work in e-mails such as this one but not in
Safari? It reads the whole durn page.
On Nov 2, 2007, at 1:03 AM, Cara Quinn wrote:
VO A is read from cursor to end and VO shift W is read entire
window.
Smiles,
CQ :)
On Nov 1, 2007, at 9:50 PM, VaShaun Jones wrote:
I was doing some thinking and most people say that the say all
command is VO A. In theory this is correct, but if it is echoing
the window that VO has focus on then it is safe to assume that on
a web page that it will read the whole thing. I almost bet that
if you have a command that reads from the cursor to the end of
text that it will solve this problem. Does anyone know of such a
keystroke?
--
Jonnie Appleseed
with his
Hands-on Technolog(eye)s
reducing technologies disabilities
one byte at a time