I haven't done this for years, but if the cursor is replaced by a highlight you can set highlight to on under General, Highlight. This tells Window-Eyes to look for a highlight with the arrows, tab, and control-tab keys. You may also have to manually set the highlight color for the window. Or, not knowing anything about exactly what you're dealing with, if each line is highlighted you could set the cursor keys to read highlight or define a speak window with its attributes set to the highlight colors.

Hth,
Tom


On 5/19/2012 1:18 AM, Tim Burgess wrote:
OK,

It’s been a couple of years since I last wrote any Window-Eyes script
code, so I guess I now have the excuse to spend the time to listen to
Chip’s tutorials. I’m under time pressure for this c++ project, but I
guess there’s no known quick fix.

Best wishes.

Tim Burgess

Raised Bar Ltd

Phone: +44 (0)1827 719822

Don't forget to vote for improved access to music and music technology at

http://www.raisedbar.net/petition.htm

*From:*RicksPlace [mailto:[email protected]]
*Sent:* 18 May 2012 09:11
*To:* [email protected]
*Subject:* Re: Tracing in Visual Studio 2010 Pro

Perhaps a script would work.

It is likely either a graphic or color indicates the point of interest
in the code base and should be able to be found so long as it is consistent.

Let me know how it works when you get there since I will be working with
the debugger some day and will need to create some script code to avoid
accessibility issues with that real-time feature myself.

Rick USA


Reply via email to