The topics of the various cursors and navigating text are covered extensively
in the getting started guide that comes built into every Mac. I suggest you
read those pages and it will most likely answer all of your questions. In order
to get to this you press VO with the letter H to bring up the
Could you explain please how the "system carrot" and arrow keys are used
for navigation in text? How is this turned on or chosen?
Sabahattin Gucukoglu wrote:
There is nothing really equivalent to a ?Browse Mode? with VoiceOver,
which treats web objects like any other. You can use
Yes, I mostly use the system carrot for selection, and the number pad for
everything else.
Sent from my iPhone
> On Apr 4, 2016, at 8:18 AM, Sabahattin Gucukoglu wrote:
>
> There is nothing really equivalent to a “Browse Mode” with VoiceOver, which
> treats web objects
There is nothing really equivalent to a “Browse Mode” with VoiceOver, which
treats web objects like any other. You can use QuickNav, the numpad or the
trackpad to make it go somewhat faster and easier than using VO commands, but
the closest you’ll get to a fully virtual document is to use
QUick-nav can be toggled by pressing left+right arrow keys together. This
will then allow single-letter-nav (e.g. H for heading, b for button, etc.),
right/left arrow to go to next/prev element, right+up or down+left to cycle
through web rotor, and up/down to move to next/prev item in web rotor,
Hi all,
some screen readers have what they call brows mode for reading web pages etc.
What if anything would be the same thing in VO and if we do how would we turn
it off or on?
Thanks for any help.
Max.
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