Hello Curtis,

If it doesn't work, what does it do? Remain silent? Say the wrong thing? If so, 
did you try entering a delay factor?

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Curtis Delzer 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, September 19, 2008 12:21 PM
  Subject: Re: what I can really use!


  tried that exactly, no luck at all.

  I know I "should" be able to do that, and thanks for the kind way as to how 
to do it with all the steps, but, as I say, been there, done that, no cigar! 
Tried delays of different times, no luck, undefined control-tab if defined 
other ways in WE, no cigar!

  Thanks!

  Curtis Delzer.
  HS

  At 02:04 PM 9/19/2008, you wrote:

    Hello Curtis,

    You should be able to get this automatic reading by following these steps:

    1. Press Control-Backslash to open the Window-Eyes Control Panel.
    2. Press alt-c to open the Cursoring dialogue.
    3. Down arrow until you locate an "undefined" cursoring key.
    4. Press alt-c to choose the Capture Key button.
    5. Press control-tab.
    6. Press tab to access the First Action.
    7. Press down arrow until you have selected Title/Status.
    8. Press tab until you reach the OK button and press enter to accept the 
    changes.
    9. Repeat starting at step 5 using control-shift-tab as the key to be 
    defined.
    10. Press alt-f to pull down the File menu.
    11. Press s to pull down the Save menu.
    12. Press s again to save the Eudora set file.
    13. You have now defined control-tab and control-shift-tab to pass through 
    to Eudora, then speak the title of the window.

    I hope this helps. As you can see, if it works for you, it is not a matter 
    of scripting. :-)

    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: "Curtis Delzer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
    To: "the gw-micro scripting list" <[email protected]>
    Sent: Friday, September 19, 2008 9:59 AM
    Subject: what I can really use!


    I use Eudora, as many of you know if you really care, <grin> but in
    this program, using the control-tab cycles you through open
    mailboxes, placing your focus on them, toward the left, and
    control-shift-tab, to the right. This is normal behavior in programs
    which use multiple windows inside them. Window-Eyes needs the ability
    to read the window titles as they are shown! Now we have to, each
    time the focus is changed, hit the window title command to see what
    it is. It'd probably be a simple script for someone with the
    inclination to figure out what to look for and to respond to
    control-tab, or control-shift-tab. I attempted to do this using set
    file capabilities, no luck!

    Curtis Delzer.
    HS

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