Also make sure if you want to use the JAWS find command properly you have
the entire document loaded.

Yes, ctrl-f is Adobe's find command. It has some accessibility issue that
admittedly I don't quite understand. As mentiond above, you can use the JAWS
find command instead.



-----Original Message-----
From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:jaws-users-list-boun...@jaws-users.com] On
Behalf Of ?a?a???t?? ??t???p?????
Sent: November 17, 2017 2:20 AM
To: jaws-users-list@jaws-users.com
Subject: Re: [JAWS-Users] How to use jaws find in acrobat reader in a PDF
document

Hi Mary/all,
Just try jaws-key-cntrl-f and you might see light again (smile).
                Gr      eet     ings from storm- struck Greece,
                        Takis

-----Original Message-----
From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:jaws-users-list-boun...@jaws-users.com] On
Behalf Of Mary Otten
Sent: Thursday, November 16, 2017 10:19 PM
To: jaws-users-list@jaws-users.com
Subject: [JAWS-Users] How to use jaws find in acrobat reader in a PDF
document

I have read the jaws help regarding using jaws with acrobat acrobat reader.
There was no mention made of using the find command, but since it works in
HTML documents on the Internet, I assumed it would also work in PDF files.
So if I do a control F, then type in a word or phrase I know is in a PDF
document, I expect to be moved there. That is not happening. What am I doing
wrong and how can I fix it?
Mary


Sent from my iPhone

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