Hi LeDon,

I believe you wanted the Virtual Ribbons explained.  Here you go, from Jaws 
training:

The Virtual Ribbon Menu Feature - New in JAWS 12
Introduction

The ribbon is a new style of menu available in many new applications being 
released today. Ribbons first appeared in Office 2007 programs, but are now
becoming more common in other applications tailored for the Windows® 7 
operating system. Ribbons create an accessibility challenge due to 
inconsistent
navigation between various groups and items. For example, the lower ribbon 
contains groups of icons, sometimes arranged in several rows. When you press
the ARROW keys to move between items in a group, you can skip items if there 
is a row above or below the one you are on. When pressing the ARROW keys or
TAB, no indication is given when focus leaves one group and enters another. 
You cannot use first letter navigation in the ribbons, because pressing keys
might activate ribbon key tips. Finally, because of a group's layout, you do 
not know if you should navigate up, down, left, or right to select an item.


The new virtual ribbon menu feature in JAWS® screen reading software 
provides predictable navigation, lets you see everything in the ribbon, and 
offers
consistency when navigating with the ARROW keys. For example, each group on 
the lower ribbon is treated as a submenu. Once you open the group submenu,
you can press DOWN ARROW to move through all of the items within that group. 
When you reach the bottom of the items in that group, focus wraps back to
the top item, and vice versa. You can also use first letter navigation in 
the virtual ribbon menu. Here are a few keystrokes to help you get started 
using
the virtual ribbon menu:

list of 6 items
• Move from one ribbon tab to another, ALT to move to the first tab, then 
LEFT or RIGHT ARROW. JAWS reads the name of the tab as you move to it.
• Move from an upper ribbon tab to the lower ribbon groups, DOWN ARROW or 
ENTER. JAWS announces and treats the lower ribbon groups as if they were 
submenus.

• Open a ribbon group submenu, RIGHT ARROW or ENTER.
• Navigate the items within each submenu, UP or DOWN ARROW, or first letter 
navigation.
• Close a submenu, LEFT ARROW or ESC.
• Move from the lower ribbon back to the upper ribbon, ESC.
list end

NOTE: One nice feature of the JAWS virtual ribbon menu is that when you 
activate an item and focus returns to the document or application you are 
working
on, JAWS remembers where you just were on the ribbon. If you press ALT 
again, instead of having to go back to the upper ribbon and find your place 
again,
JAWS goes right back to where it was previously, in the same group, and on 
the exact same control you were last on.

I'll demonstrate all of these things to you, and you can practice along with 
me in just a few minutes.

Also, just a reminder, whenever you want to pause the audio of this DAISY 
book, just press CTRL+P. When you are ready to resume, press CTRL+P again. 
Remember,
you can leave the DAISY book in the background and use this keystroke to 
play or pause the audio while working on your practice documents in the 
foreground.
When FSReader DAISY player is open, even in the background, use this 
keystroke to toggle the audio on and off. If you need to print something 
while FSReader
is open, just go to the File menu and choose Print.

Using the JAWS Virtual Ribbon Menu as Opposed to the Microsoft Ribbon - Some 
Differences

The virtual ribbon menus feature allows for ribbon navigation using standard 
menu type commands such as scrolling with the arrow keys and first letter
navigation. While virtual ribbon menus are enabled with JAWS, the built-in 
key tips and accelerator keys that appear visually on the ribbon and on the
buttons are disabled.

For example, to insert a bookmark in Microsoft® Word, here are the steps for 
both scenarios, one using the ribbon, and the second one using JAWS virtual
ribbon menus:

Using Microsoft Word Key Tips:

list of 2 items
• Using the built-in keyboard access in Microsoft Word, you would first 
press ALT+N to move to the Insert tab of the ribbon.
• Next, you press the letter K, the Microsoft key tip to activate the 
bookmark button.
list end

Using JAWS Virtual Ribbon Menus:

list of 4 items
• In order to activate the button using the virtual ribbon menus you first 
press ALT+N to move to the Insert tab of the ribbon.
• Next, you would press DOWN ARROW or ENTER to go to the lower ribbon.
• Once on the lower ribbon, you would press L to move to the Links submenu, 
using first letter navigation. The submenu opens, and focus is on the 
Hyperlink
button.
• Finally, you press B for Bookmark.
list end

The nice thing about this is that these keystrokes are easy to remember, 
because it is first letter navigation.

If you are comfortable using the Microsoft built-in keyboard commands, it 
may be best to leave the virtual ribbon menu feature off. The majority of 
people
however have not memorized many of the Microsoft access keys for programs 
using the ribbon and thus will not lose any functionality by enabling the 
feature.


Turning the Virtual Ribbon Menu On and Off

By default the virtual ribbon menu setting in JAWS 12 is turned off. This 
means that JAWS 12 behaves as in prior versions when interacting with the 
ribbons.
You can enable virtual ribbon menus using the JAWS Startup Wizard or 
Settings Center.

The JAWS Startup Wizard

The JAWS Startup Wizard runs the first time you start JAWS after it has been 
installed, or by activating the Startup Wizard item in the Help menu. The
virtual ribbon menus check box is located on the third page of the wizard. 
When the check box is checked, the virtual ribbon menus are active.

JAWS Settings Center

Perform the following steps to use JAWS Settings Center to enable or disable 
Virtual Ribbon Menus:

list of 7 items
1. First, press INSERT+F2 to activate the Run JAWS Managers list.
2. Press the letter S until you land on the settings center item and press 
ENTER to activate it. The settings center dialog box opens with the cursor 
in
the search edit box.
3. Press CTRL+SHIFT+D to activate the default settings.
4. Type the word "ribbon" (without the quotes).
5. Press the DOWN ARROW to move through the list of search results until you 
land on the Use Virtual Ribbon Menu check box.
6. Press the SPACE BAR to check or uncheck the box.
7. Press TAB to move to the OK button, and activate it with the SPACEBAR.
list end

If you haven't already enabled virtual ribbon menus, go ahead and do so 
before continuing with the practice section that comes up next. If 
necessary, pause
the audio of this DAISY book by pressing CTRL+P. When you are ready to 
resume, press CTRL+P again. Remember, you can leave the DAISY book in the 
background
and use this keystroke to play and pause the audio. CTRL+P does not access 
the print dialog box when FSReader DAISY player is open.

Using WordPad in Windows 7 for Practice

EXERCISE: Open WordPad in Windows 7 on your computer and follow along with 
the instructor to explore the virtual ribbon menu feature in JAWS 12 or 
later.


NOTE: If you do not have Windows 7 and the ribbon version of WordPad you can 
still learn to use the Virtual Ribbon Menus in Word 2007 or 2010 in Windows
Vista or Windows XP. The instructions below will work the same there; it is 
just that you will hear different results. For example, in Word 2010 there
is a File tab, as well as tabs for Home, Insert, Page Layout, References, 
Mailings, Review, and more depending on how you have customized Word. The 
lower
ribbon of the Home tab contains a Clipboard, Font, Paragraph, Styles, and 
Editing group. So even though you may not hear exactly the same thing if you
are using an Office 2007 or Office 2010 product, every concept should be the 
same. Just pause the audio and practice the techniques I'll show you, 
realizing
you will have even more to explore and practice with in Office than WordPad.

Overview of the Virtual Ribbon Structure with JAWS in WordPad

I'm going to open the start menu and type WordPad. There it is. I'll press 
ENTER to open it. Go ahead and open WordPad on your computer as well.

I always like to go through an overview of what the window looks like for 
each program. WordPad in Windows 7 has the following items on the screen, 
going
from the top to bottom:

list of 5 items
• The title bar at the top of the screen, which has the minimize, restore, 
and close buttons on the right side, and the system icon on the far left 
side.
The system icon is used to open the menus to minimize, restore, move the 
program window, and so on. Just to the right of the system icon is the Quick 
Access
Toolbar, or QAT, pronounced cat.
• On row two of the screen is the upper tabs of the ribbon. From left to 
right they are the Application Menu, basically the same as the File menu, 
then
Home and View tabs. It's pretty simple compared to programs like Word, 
Excel®, and PowerPoint®.
• On what basically would be rows three through six is the lower ribbon. The 
lower ribbon contains buttons, edit boxes, and other controls arranged in
groups.
• The next line below the lower ribbon contains a ruler bar.
• The main application window for WordPad is next, and at the bottom row of 
the screen is a typical status bar.
list end

Let's do a little bit of exploring together.

list of 5 items
1. First, press ALT to move to the Home tab of the WordPad screen. JAWS 
announced virtual ribbons, home tab.
2. Next, press LEFT ARROW. There's the first tab. In programs like Word 2010 
and Excel 2010, this is called the File tab. Here JAWS announces application
menu drop down grid. It's basically the same as the File menu was in earlier 
versions of WordPad. We'll look at it more in a minute.
3. Press RIGHT ARROW now to move past the Home tab to the View tab. When 
focus moves to the View tab, the lower ribbon changes to show the controls, 
again
in groups, that have to do with different things that apply to viewing 
documents. The groups there are Zoom to zoom in and out, Show or Hide (for 
the ruler
and status bar), and Settings for things like word wrap and measurement 
units.
4. If you keep going to the right you find a Help button, then focus wraps 
around to the first tab, which I'm going to call the File tab going forward
in this lesson. When focus goes to the Help button or the File tab, the 
lower ribbon does not change. Activating the File tab opens a drop-down 
menu.
5. Press RIGHT or LEFT ARROW again until you move back to the Home tab.
list end

Next, we'll look at how to access some of the items in the lower ribbon of 
the Home tab.

list of 5 items
1. Press DOWN ARROW. Focus moves to the Clipboard group on the lower ribbon. 
Visually, there is a highlight rectangle around this group that JAWS has put
on the screen. JAWS says lower ribbon, clipboard submenu.
2. Press DOWN ARROW again and notice you hear the other groups as you 
continue. There's the Font submenu, the Paragraph submenu, the Insert 
submenu, and
the Editing submenu. Finally, focus wraps back to the Clipboard submenu. I'm 
not going to spend time on the items here in the Clipboard group, since most
of us use CTRL+V to paste, but there is also a cut and a copy button there.
3. Press DOWN ARROW to move to the Font group. JAWS says font submenu.
4. Press RIGHT ARROW to open the Font submenu. JAWS says font family, edit 
combo, Calibri. This is where you change the font when you want to.
5. For now, just press DOWN ARROW again, just as if you were going through 
an open submenu in a normal program. JAWS says font size, edit combo, 11. 
The
current font size is 11 point. Again, you can change this here, but for now, 
go ahead and press DOWN ARROW again to explore all the items here. You'll
find about 10 other buttons. Eventually focus wraps back to the font name, 
Calibri.
list end

Isn't this great?! JAWS takes all the controls within the Font group and 
puts them into a nice, tidy vertical menu. It makes it very easy to find all 
the
controls.

First Letter Navigation between Ribbon Groups

You also have the ability to navigate by using first letter from one group 
to another.

NOTE: The rule of thumb for first letter navigation in menus is if there is 
only one item beginning with that letter, it gets activated and focus leaves
the menus. If it is a submenu, the new menu opens and focus is placed on the 
first item in the group. If there are multiple items that begin with the 
same
letter, pressing that letter cycles between them and you press ENTER to 
activate the one you wish.

Let's explore how first letter navigation works in moving from one ribbon 
group to another.

list of 7 items
1. First, press ESC a couple of times to make sure you are not in the 
ribbon.
2. Next, press ALT by itself to move to the Home tab of the ribbon in 
WordPad.
3. Press RIGHT ARROW to move to the View tab.
4. Press DOWN ARROW and let's explore the three groups that are here with 
the arrow keys first. The first group is the Zoom group. JAWS said Zoom 
submenu.

5. Press DOWN ARROW again. There's the Show or Hide group.
6. Press DOWN ARROW again. There's the Settings group.
7. Press DOWN ARROW again. Focus moves back to the Zoom submenu.
list end

So, here on the View tab there are three groups on the lower ribbon. If you 
press Z, don't do it just yet, focus would move to the Zoom submenu and open
it, and focus would be placed on the first item in that group. If you press 
S, since there are two items that begin with that letter here, focus simply
switches between the two. You need to press ENTER to open either of these 
submenus. Let's practice this now.

list of 9 items
1. Press S a few times to cycle between the Show or Hide group and the 
Settings group.
2. Now, say that you want to go into the Show or Hide group. Press S until 
you are on that submenu, and then press ENTER to go into that group. Focus 
is
on the first item in that group, the Ruler check box. Remember, the ruler is 
located on the screen between the bottom of the ribbon and the top of the
document area. So here is where you can turn this on or off. I'm going to 
leave it alone for now.
3. Press DOWN ARROW a few times to look at the other items in the Show or 
Hide group. There are only two items here.
4. Press ESC to move back out of this group and back to the prior level. 
You're back at the submenu level, or the group level, on the lower ribbon.
5. Now, press Z. What happens? Since there was only one item at this level 
that began with the letter Z, the Zoom group, the Zoom submenu opened and 
focus
is on the first item within that group, the Zoom In button.
6. Press DOWN ARROW a few times to look at the other items in the Zoom 
group. There are three items here.
7. OK, press ESC to move back out of this group and back to the prior level.
8. Press ESC one more time to go back to the upper tabs of the ribbon.
9. Finally, press ESC once more to exit the ribbon and put focus back in the 
document.
list end

First Letter Navigation in the Lower Ribbon Groups

We are going to look at the items on the Home tab in the Font group for this 
exercise. I will show you how to use first letter navigation to get things
done quickly in the lower ribbon.

list of 10 items
1. Press ALT to move to the upper tabs of the ribbon in WordPad.
2. Press LEFT or RIGHT ARROW to move focus to the Home tab, if necessary.
3. Press DOWN ARROW until you find the Font group. JAWS says Font submenu.
4. Press RIGHT ARROW to open the Font submenu. Focus is on the item Calibri 
in the font submenu.
5. Earlier, when we moved through the controls here, you probably heard 
there was a bold button. Press B now. Focus moves back to the document, and 
the
bold button is now pressed. You could also just press CTRL+B but I wanted to 
show you how to use first letter navigation in the virtual ribbon menu. 
Let's
look at this again.
6. Press ALT by itself. Notice how focus returns right back to the same spot 
on the ribbon, on the Bold button? JAWS said bold button pressed. This is
fantastic! Without JAWS running, focus would have gone back to the Home tab 
and to move here you would either have to press TAB about eight times or 
DOWN
ARROW twice to the Font group and open the submenu again. The way JAWS 
remembers where you were in the ribbon is a great feature!
7. Next, press I. Focus moves back to the document, and the italic button 
has now been pressed. So if you type something right now it would be both 
bold
and italic. But, let's look at one more thing here with first letter 
navigation.
8. Press ALT to go back to the ribbon. JAWS says italic button pressed. 
Again, you are placed right back where you left off in the lower ribbon.
9. Now press the letter S. JAWS announces the strike through button. But it 
did not activate it. Why? Because there are other items here that begin with
the letter S as well. Press S several times to cycle through them. You 
should hear subscript, superscript, and shrink font buttons in addition to 
the strike
through button. When there are multiple items that begin with the same 
letter, press ENTER on the one you want to activate and focus returns to the 
document
area.
10. For now, if you did not press ENTER on any of the items that began with 
the letter S, just press ESC a couple of times to get out of the ribbon and
put focus back in the document.
list end

Let's work through another example together:

list of 4 items
1. What if you want to insert a picture, or insert the date and time into a 
document? First press ALT to move to the Home tab of the ribbon.
2. Now, press DOWN ARROW to move to the Insert submenu, and RIGHT ARROW to 
open it.
3. Navigate through the submenu by pressing UP or DOWN ARROW first. Listen 
to what is there and notice that two items start with the letter P, one 
starts
with the letter D, and one starts with the letter I. Therefore, to insert 
the date and time you would only need to press D once, the date and time 
dialog
box opens with a choice of formats for the date and time that you can insert 
into the document at the cursor location. However, to insert a picture you
will have to press P to move to the word Picture followed by ENTER.
4. For the moment, just press ESC a few times to get out of the ribbon and 
put focus back in the document.
list end

Edit Boxes and Edit Combo Boxes Using the Virtual Ribbon Menu

Let's now look at how to change the font and the point size in the virtual 
ribbon menu.

list of 6 items
1. Press ALT to move back to the ribbon. Focus is on the tabs in the upper 
ribbon.
2. If necessary, press LEFT and RIGHT ARROW to move to the Home tab.
3. Press DOWN ARROW to move to the Font submenu, and press RIGHT ARROW to 
open it.
4. Focus is on Calibri in the menus. Notice that focus does not go into edit 
mode on this or the point size edit combo boxes. When using the virtual 
ribbon
menus in JAWS, in order to change an edit box value, you need to go into 
forms mode.
5. Press ENTER on Calibri to go into forms mode. I heard the sound that 
indicates forms mode is on.
6. Now press DOWN ARROW or UP ARROW and notice that the focus moves through 
the various font choices available. When you want to change to another font,
just press ENTER when you find the one you want. Forms mode goes off and 
focus returns to the document. The font is now changed to the new one in the 
document.

list end

NOTE: For check boxes in the ribbon, use the SPACEBAR to toggle the 
selection. For split buttons, often SPACEBAR will perform one action and 
ENTER will
perform another. This depends on the actual button, so you will sometimes 
need to experiment.

Using the Quick Access Toolbar with the Virtual Ribbon Menu

What is the Quick Access Toolbar, QAT? The Quick Access Toolbar is a small 
toolbar that has buttons for activating common tasks. Usually, the default 
buttons
there are the Save button, the Undo button, and the Redo button, and so on. 
It also depends on what program you are using. These buttons can be deleted
and new buttons can be added. Whatever button is the first button on the QAT 
can be activated by pressing ALT+1. The second button on the QAT can be 
accessed
by pressing ALT+2, and so on. Since keyboard users typically use CTRL+S to 
save, CTRL+Z to undo, and CTRL+Y to redo, I usually remove these from the 
QAT
and add buttons that I use most often in that particular application.

NOTE: In an open message in Outlook®, the keystrokes ALT+1, ALT+2, and so 
on, perform different actions and do not access the QAT when JAWS is 
running.
You can still access the buttons on the QAT by moving to the QAT as 
described in the next paragraph.

When virtual ribbon menus are active, you can navigate to the Quick Access 
Toolbar (QAT) by moving to one of the tabs on the left side of the ribbon 
and
pressing UP ARROW. Remember, the QAT is located on the title bar on the far 
left side of the screen. For example, in WordPad, Word, or Excel press ALT+H
to move to the Home tab. The last time I was in the ribbon I was in the Font 
group, so I'm going to go back to the ribbon by pressing the ALT key, and
press ESC until I get to the upper ribbon. Then once you are on the Home tab 
press UP ARROW once and the cursor moves to the QAT. In this case the Redo
button is the last button on the QAT. Once you reach the QAT, press RIGHT or 
LEFT ARROW to move between the buttons there. Press DOWN ARROW to return to
the ribbon or press ENTER on one of the buttons to activate it.

Let's look at the QAT in WordPad together.

list of 3 items
1. On my computer I heard JAWS announce redo button unavailable. I just did 
a Say Word, INSERT+NUM PAD 5, to repeat that. I have not undone anything yet
in WordPad, so this button is unavailable at the moment. The help message 
told me that this is button three on the QAT, ALT followed by 3.
2. Press LEFT ARROW to explore the other buttons here. There is also a 
Customize Quick Access Toolbar button. You can use it to remove these 
buttons if
you want to. There are some other choices there as well. However, you can 
add ANY button on the ribbon to the QAT, not just the few shown in the 
Customize
Quick Access Toolbar dialog box.
3. For now, press ESC a couple of times to get out of the ribbon and return 
to the document area.
list end

Adding an Item to the QAT

Let's say you need to use the insert date and time button a lot. Perform the 
following steps to add it to the QAT:

list of 8 items
1. Press ALT+H to move to the Home tab of the ribbon.
2. Press DOWN ARROW to move to the lower ribbon.
3. Press I to move to the Insert group. The submenu opens and focus is on 
the Picture button.
4. Press DOWN ARROW until you find the Date and Time button in the menu.
5. Press INSERT+NUMPAD MINUS to route the JAWS cursor to the button. If you 
are using laptop keyboard layout, press CAPS LOCK+LEFT BRACKET to route the
JAWS cursor to the button.
6. Press NUMPAD ASTERISK to perform a right mouse click. Laptop keyboard 
layout users press CAPS LOCK+9 on the numbers row to perform the right mouse 
click.

7. Use the ARROW KEYS if necessary to find the item Add to Quick Access 
Toolbar, and press ENTER on it. This button is now added to the QAT in the 
next
position in line. For example, if you still have the first three buttons 
there, now the Date and Time button is button four.
8. Verify this and see if it works. Try pressing ALT+4 to see if the Date 
and Time dialog box appears. It worked on my computer. I'll press ESC to 
close
the dialog box for now.
list end

The File Menu in WordPad

Press ALT+F to open the File menu in WordPad, and then use DOWN ARROW to 
explore the items there. Here is where you find the following choices:

list of 10 items
• New
• Open
• Save
• Save as
• Print
• Page setup
• Send in e-mail
• About WordPad
• Exit
• Also if you have opened any recent documents, they will be listed here, in 
the right hand column of the menu with the most recent listed first.
list end

I'm going to press ESC a couple of times to get out of the File menu and 
return focus to the document area.

Don't forget to close WordPad when you are finished practicing with the 
ribbon.

Conclusion

The virtual ribbon menu feature of JAWS definitely makes navigating the 
complexities of the new ribbons from Microsoft and other software 
manufacturers
a breeze! I'm going to be using it a lot from now on, and I hope you will 
also. Thanks for joining me in this DAISY book and I hope you enjoy using 
the
new virtual ribbon menu feature in JAWS!

Last revised 2010-12-17

Take care.
Mike
This email was sent from my, iBarstool.
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