Hello Andy, In addition to the change that Anne describes under Verbosity in the VoiceOver utility to speak text to the right of the cursor, you can forward delete a character on a Mac laptop keyboard by pressing Fn+delete, where the Fn key is at the bottom left corner of the Mac laptop or Apple Wireless keyboard. To forward delete a word, press Fn+Option+delete.
David Griffith is correct that in the long run it will help to get used to the notion of the insertion point being located between letters, and VoiceOver announcing the letter you just moved over depending on the direction in which you moved. Maybe what would help you is to take a text document, and use movement keys like your right and left arrow keys, in combination with holding down the shift key to select text. VoiceOver will announce what has been highlighted, and you can move in either direction, or to the beginning or end of a line (with Command+Left arrow or Command+Right arrow) while continuing to hold down the shift key, and you'll hear the characters announced as you move and select. You can also move and select by words as well as by characters, by pressing Option+Right arrow and Option+Left arrow. And if you hold down the Shift key along with the Option key as you tap your arrow keys, you'll hear the selections announced as you add (or remove) words. What's going to happen, though, is that if you change your verbosity so that VoiceOver speaks the text to the right of the cursor, some of those word deletions won't make sense, because you'll be positioned one character off. On the iPhone with a paired keyboard, because the "Fn" key isn't recognized in iOS, I have to forward delete by pressing the Shift key and tapping the right arrow key, then pressing the delete key. HTH. Cheers, Esther On 19 Jul 2013, at 03:50, Anne Robertson wrote: > Hello Andy, > > You can change the way the insertion point works to be more like JAWS in > VoiceOver Utility, Verbosity, Text, When moving the cursor: click the button > and select Speak text to the right of the cursor. > > Personally, I like the standard Mac way of doing things which is that the > insertion point is to the right of what you just heard when navigating to the > right, and to the left of what you just heard when navigating to the left. > This seems logical to me. > > Cheers, > > Anne > > > On 19 Jul 2013, at 14:57, Andy Collins <[email protected]> wrote: > >> Hi all - >> >> At the moment, the way things are set up is confusing me when I am trying to >> edit text in mail or Text Editor. When I try to delete a character, or >> correct a spelling manually, I'm fiddling about trying to get the focus on >> the right character to delete. All too often, I find the wrong character has >> been deleted, because the insertion point [if that's the correct term for >> it] is focussed somewhere else in the word than where I expect it to be. >> How/where do I look to change this, so it works in the more familiar way I'm >> use to from using JAWS? - >> >> Andy >> > <--- Mac Access At Mac Access Dot Net ---> To reply to this post, please address your message to [email protected] You can find an archive of all messages posted to the Mac-Access forum at either the list's own dedicated web archive: <http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/pipermail/mac-access/index.html> or at the public Mail Archive: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/>. Subscribe to the list's RSS feed from: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/maillist.xml> As the Mac Access Dot Net administrators, we do our very best to ensure that the Mac-Access E-Mal list remains malware, spyware, Trojan, virus and worm-free. However, this should in no way replace your own security strategy. We assume neither liability nor responsibility should something unpredictable happen. Please remember to update your membership preferences periodically by visiting the list website at: <http://mail.tft-bbs.co.uk/mailman/listinfo/mac-access/options/>
