Re: Hamburger Menus and Such


Brian's Mail list account
 

A thesaurus is a good investment I find. However I have to say being as lazy as most blokes I know, I do have quite a wide vocabulary (They can't sue you for that, honest), and repeated listening to the file can indeed show up most weird bits.
I often wonder when reading so called grammar and spellchecked files, quite how they end up so boring and similar. People like a bit of personality, yes even in tutorials.
Brian

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----- Original Message -----
From: "David Russell" <david.sonofhashem@...>
To: <chat@nvda.groups.io>
Sent: Wednesday, June 08, 2022 2:15 AM
Subject: [chat] Hamburger Menus and Such


Hello NVDA Chat,

This is a bit of an expansion on the thread I started concerning using
a screen reader with an editing tool called ProWritingAid.
The hamburger menu and being able to locate it, is the issue. Chances
are, it is inaccessible due to design from what I read.

I did a Google search on Grammarly Accessibility with NVDA, and here
is the answer from an old group post which was the first Google
result:

It is completely inaccessible with any screen reader. Your best option
would be to change the grammar checker in MS Word to also check for
styles, not just grammar.

If I rely on MS Word then, will I only hear a buzz sound when
something is found to be amiss?

Can MS Word provide detailed info about sticky sentences, redundant
words, mispelling, reading grade level etc?

I am trying to keep costs to a limit in hiring a freelance editor by
doing as much self-editing as feasible.
Thanks once again.

--
David C. Russell, Author
david.sonofhashem@...



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