Hi Jamie,

Below are various notes I've saved for identifying colors.  See if 1 of them 
will help:

From: Steve
Use your skim reading tool.  You first want to define a skim reading tool
(control-shift-Jaws Key-Down arrow).

You have four radio buttons, select the bottom one which is color and
attributes.

Now, tab to the color selection combo box and select the color you want.
You might need to find the first instance of the blue name in your word doc
so you know which shade of blue you need to specify in the attributes box.
Take my advice, I don't use it anyway.
Steve

From: Cy Selfridge
Hi,
Try insert+numrow 5 to find the color of a particular letter.
Cy

From: Ann Byrne
First, you need to know what color you are searching for.  If you
know one instance, you can press insert+5 on the numbers row for JAWS
to identify the color.  Often, though, JAWS does not name the color
what Microsoft does, so there's a problem.  So.  *If you can
establish what the color is for Office, jump through these hoops:

1. In Word press control+f for find.
2.  Be sure there is no text in the find field.
3. Open the find split button (space bar?) and arrow to advanced find.
4. Press enter, and tab to the find and replace toolbar.
5. Pressing enter on the toolbar gives you a formatting menu.  enter on
font.
6. Tab to the color group, enter to open it, find your color and press
enter.
7.  I didn't go farther than that, but I'm sure you have to get to an
okay button or two and press it or them.

Good luck!

Ann

From: Adrian Spratt
Try JAWS's skim reading. Press shift-control-JAWS key-down arrow to go into
a menu of choices. The fourth, or last, enables you to search by color.

You can also set up JAWS to identify colors in configuration Manager's
"speech and sounds."
Adrian

From: Marquette, Ed
Another option is to switch the voice scheme.
JAWS key plus Alt Plus S will announce colors as you read.  Well, actually,
it will give you a list of reading scheme voices, at least one of which will
announce colors.
That will allow you to read the entire text and have jaws pick and announce
the colors as the cursor moves over the text.
The color changes will be announced as you read line-by-line.
Be sure you pick a scheme from the list that announces the colors.  I think
"Classic with Colors" is one of the choices.
Ed

From: Marquette, Ed
The same tip I gave to identify text in colors will work for underlined
text.  Just press Alt plus JAWS key plus S.  Pick a scheme that reads
attributes.  JAWS will "switch" to that scheme.  Turn it off by going back
to your preferred scheme which, for me, is classic.
Ed

From: Farfar Carlson
Ed,

Good tips, but won't help in a search for text with those attributes. Also I
think that in "say all" mode attributes are not spoken, unless there is a
speech scheme to do this?

It get rather arduous to arrow line-by-line or word-by-word to hear the
various attribute changes in a large document.

Dave

From: Marquette, Ed
Dave:
You are right.  If one is just looking to "find" the underlined text and not
necessarily read the text with the underlined text distinguished from the
non-underlined text (same is true for colors), the reading scheme won't help
at all.  The problem with just searching for the text, as Ann suggests, is
that it just gets you to the beginning of the text with that color or
attribute.  I usually like to know when the underlining or color change
stops too.
I too use the MS Word format search strategy, and I thought you and Ann did
a great job of explaining.  The Scheme just makes it easy precisely to
identify what is and what is not in the target color or attribute once you
get there.
Perhaps you and/or Ann know this.  If the color or underlining feature is
applied through a style instead of just through direct formatting, will it
still work?
Presumably it would since, in any event, the text is in the desired
font/attribute.  Still, Word can be a little funny about things like that.
For instance, if the color or attribute is applied through "track changes,"
one usually cannot search for double-underline or strikethrough text, even
though that is the way added or deleted text actually appears.
Ed

From: Adrian Spratt
I can think of a way to locate the end of color text. First, search for the
desired color, and in each instance placed a text marker, such as double
asterisk or number sign, each time a passage begins. When that process is
complete, return to the first instance of color text. Now change the color
to black, or however the regular text appears and search for the instances
where it resumes, indicating also that color text ends. Place another text
marker at those points. Obviously, if more than one color is used, as
happens when several lawyers are involved in negotiating or otherwise
drafting a document, other markers would be used for other colors.

This process would take a little time at the beginning, but save time in the
long run. The risk might be upsetting the original format with the new
symbols. In WordPerfect, which I use, that would be easy to fix thanks to
reveal codes. I can't speak for MS word, which I try to avoid.
Adrian

From: "Francisco Salvador Crespo" <[email protected]>
Has jaws got a comand to read underline text in word?
Sorry, my english is very basic
Tanks,
Francisco

From: Farfar Carlson
Follow Ann's suggestion but select the font characteristic of underline,
rather than a specific color. That might work.

Dave



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

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Jamie Prater
To: [email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, August 12, 2014 3:04 PM
Subject: [JAWS-Users] another jaws question


Hi, all, I have another jaws question. How do you make jaws read the colors
of text on a webpage or other place? I used to know but haven't used it in
several years and forgot. Thanks and have a blessed day.

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