Aaron,

how about the example in the onCursorKey documentation?

I think it shows you how you can suppress the normal window eyes speech by
returning true, and this is what isn't working for me.

thanks.

Chip
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Aaron Smith [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Wednesday, November 11, 2009 8:23 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: onCursorKey not working as described

Chip,

Having some code to look at would be helpful in determining what's going on.

Aaron

On 11/10/2009 5:43 PM, Allison and Chip Orange wrote:
> Hi GW,
>
> I have a script, unfortunately at work (where I don't have access to 
> the support list), where I'm making use of the onCursorKey event; what 
> I've found, is that when I return true in both the before and after 
> stages, I am unable to stop window eyes from speaking text.  the 
> example of writing yoru own custom read line functionality, which is 
> included in the documentation, is close enough to what I'm wanting to 
> do, and absolutely doesn't work for me; that is, I'd like to stop 
> window eyes speaking what it normally does, and I'd like to replace it 
> with my own text.  I'm returning true beoth before and after the key is
processed, and it's having no effect.
>
> is this a docs error (I don't think so though), or is this function 
> not working as expected?
>
> thanks.
>
> Chip
>

--
To insure that you receive proper support, please include all past
correspondence (where applicable), and any relevant information pertinent to
your situation when submitting a problem report to the GW Micro Technical
Support Team.

Aaron Smith
GW Micro
Phone: 260/489-3671
Fax: 260/489-2608
WWW: http://www.gwmicro.com
FTP: ftp://ftp.gwmicro.com
Technical Support & Web Development

Reply via email to