Say all normally starts from the current cursor position, possibly the
beginning of the current line instead of the current position proper,
but it does not start from the beginning of the document as a general
matter.

On 2/4/15, Paul Lynch via Jfw <[email protected]> wrote:
> I was testing out the "say all" command, and I am confused by the
> behavior.  Sometimes "say all" only seems to say the current line or
> section, when I would expect it to always start from the top of the page.
>
> Test case:
>
> 1) start JAWS
> 2) Start IE 11, and go to
> http://www.freedomscientific.com/Training/Surfs-Up/Table_Reading_Commands.htm
> 3) Let JAWS read a little bit, and then hit Esc.
> 4) Hit insert + down arrow (say all).  JAWS starts reading from the first
> paragraph, skipping the heading.
> 5) Hold down right arrow long enough to fast forward to the end of the
> page.
> 6) Hit insert + down arrow (say all) again.  JAWS only reads the last line
> of the page.
>
> What does "say all" mean if it "all" doesn't mean the whole page?
>
> Thanks,
> --Paul
>
> --
> Paul Lynch
> National Library of Medicine
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-- 
Soronel Haetir
[email protected]

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