Re: question
anthony borg
Hi gene Thanks very much for the info you have sent me, which I really appreciated very much. My qwerty keyboard is similar to the 1 you have. Thanks once again for your great help. Best regards Anthony
From: nvda@nvda.groups.io [mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io] On Behalf Of Gene New Zealand
Sent: 21 August 2017 22:52 To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] question
Hi
on my full qwerty keyboard it is the nought down the bottom.
The easiest and quickest way to find out what keys are what is to turn on input help it is the nvda key + 1 on the main qwerty keyboard. Press it again to turn it off.
Hope this helps.
Gene nz
On 22/08/2017 00:18, anthony borg wrote:
-- Check out my website for NVDA tutorials and other blindness related material at http://www.accessibilitycentral.net Regardless of where you are in New Zealand if you are near one of the APNK sites you can use a copy of the NVDA screen reader on one of their computers. To find out which locations (or location) is near to you please visit http://www.aotearoapeoplesnetwork.org/content/partner-libraries (Aotearoa People's Network Kaharoa). To find an NVDA certified expert near you, please visit the following link https://certification.nvaccess.org/. The certification page contains the official list of NVDA certified individuals from around the world, who have sat and successfully passed the NVDA expert exam.
|
|