Hi Ray and all,

Isn't there an option on the Mac where you can make the cursor movement act just like it does in Windows?

Johnny

On 6/1/2011 4:38 PM, Ray Foret Jr wrote:
Here's something that might prove a big help to you. Where-as in windows, the curser is directly beneath each character you right, on the Mac, the curser is immediately to the right of each character you type. think, if you will, of the old electric typewriter. On an electric typewriter, as you will recall, the typing ball causes a letter to be typed and then moves over to the right to type the next character. Well, the Mac curser's behavior is rather more like that old typing ball than a windows curser. if, for example, you type the word "apple" as soon as you type the letter a, the Mac curser will be found just to the right of that letter a. This will allow you to type the p, just like the old typewriter ball. What you are seeing is not a characteristic of Voiceover, rather, it's a fundamental difference in how the Mac handles curser movement for everyone. So, to get back to the "apple" example, let's say you put in too many p's. How to get rid of the third p?
IF you use command+left, this should put you back at the beginning of the line; and, assuming you've typed 
the word "apple" at the beginning of this line, the word also.  IF the word is in the middle of the 
line, just use VO+left or right till you locate the beginning of the word.  Now, move the curser right letter 
by letter.  IF, IF you have the curser moving to the right and you hear, "space", followed by 
"a", that tells you that the curser is now just to the right of the letter a and is in place to 
either delete that A or type another letter to the right of that a.  So, now, you want to find that extra p 
in apple.  Just press the right arrow till you hear that third p spoken.  Now, press the delete or backspace 
key.  Here's what you just did.  When you moved to the right of that second p, you heard the third p and were 
then to the right of it.  Now, when you backspaced over that third p, you caused the curser to behave just 
like the self-correcting key on an electric type
writer.  The curser deleted that third p and then moved in to it's position so 
that now, the curser is just to the left of the l and to the right of the 
second p in the word apple.

HTH.


Sincerely,
The Constantly Barefooted Ray!!!

Now a very proud and happy Mac user!!!

Skype name:
barefootedray

Facebook:
facebook.com/ray.foretjr.1



On Jun 1, 2011, at 3:22 PM, David Eagle wrote:

Hello,
I'm sure this has been asked on this list loads of times but I must
ask, since I can't find the answer in Google. I have used windows for
years, I use windows everyday at work. I cannot come home and suddenly
get to grips with the way that Voice-Over deals
with cursoring through text. I'm sure you know what I mean. If I was
using a windows computer with or without a screenreader,
I could edit text both the same way. My head is hurting with the new
way of cursoring through text and I'm making so many mistakes; It is
taking me ages to write simple documents. Is th--
http://www.davideagle.co.uk

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