That's two different questions. changing the format may be a
problem at times, when dealing with sighted people as you say. but the
solution isn't to have the screen-reader not do what it does. the
solution is to teach blind people to find what they are looking for on the
page without being reliant on sighted people's instructions. for
example, if the sighted person tells the person that add to cart is in the
middle of the page, a little up from the center, an efficient way for a
blind person to find it is to disregard the description. Go to the top
of the page and use the screen-reader's find command to search for add to
cart or for cart or whatever you want that is expected to find the thing
efficiently if the search can be done efficiently.
I may find it interesting when a wwell-intentioned sighted person tells
me where he/she sees something on the screen. I don't use the
description to find the item.
I disagree. Changing the layout is interpreting of
course it is. It’s saying well here’s the info, in the format we think
is right, not in the visual format.
Whether you like it or not, that is interpreting and
becomes sometimes, a problem when interacting with sighted people.
All the best
Steve
Changing the layout isn't interpreting.
Interpreting is when you do something like describe something in the
screen-reader's own words. But this doesn't change what is read.
It is changing the layout to make reading logical for blind people.
There is nothing wrong with this. it has been done with great success
since MSAA was introduced in the late Nineties for reading web pages
efficiently.
----- Original Message
-----
Sent: Wednesday, February 20,
2019 2:57 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] Golden
Cursor question
Of course they are interpreting. It reads the
screen, but UIA changes the perceived layout of the screen.
All the best
Steve
What you are complaining about isn't screen
interpreting. it is a decision about what information is included and
how you can move through it. You may disagree with such decisions, but
they aren't screen interpreting.
----- Original Message
-----
Sent: Tuesday, February 19,
2019 12:30 PM
Subject: Re: [nvda] Golden
Cursor question
Hi,
OK, incorrect in so much that you can move the mouse, but
only by routing it.
Window-Eyes could not only move by clip, but by graphic
as well, this is really powerful.
If you told me to click on the third graphic from the top
left on the screen, only Window-Eyes would allow me to do this.
Whatever happened to screen reading, as opposed to screen
interpreting? Don’t even get me started.
All the best
Steve
I know that Window-eyes and JAWS have ways of
moving the mouse such as by pixels and in the case of Window-eyes, in some
other way that I don't recall now, sort of by structure. I remembered
the term while reviewing my message. it is by clip, as Window-eyes
called it. But both also allow for moving the mouse around the screen
as you do in NVDA. The difference is that in NVDA, you move the review
position, then route the mouse to where you stop the review navigator.
In JAWS, you could move the mouse to the word
click. In NVDA, you would move the review navigator to the word click,
then route the mouse. the mouse ends up in the same place. I'm
simply saying that your statement that the mouse can't be moved from the
keyboard in NVDA is factually, not a matter of opinion, not correct. I
am not disagreeing that JAWS and
Window-eyes allow for different, more
precise movements. I'm also not arguing that the Golden Cursor add-on
is necessary in NVDA to move the mouse in finer and more varied ways.
But your statement is factually incorrect.
----- Original Message
-----
Sent: Tuesday, February 19,
2019 9:56 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] Golden
Cursor question
Hi Jean,
But again, although you answered my question, it just
proves to me that I couldn’t find what I wanted, because it is not there,
that is moving the mouse using the keyboard. This is there, if you
download Golden Cursor, but I’ve had this in Window-Eyes for years, so I
couldn’t imagine managing without it now. It even exists in
JAWS. Even mouse search doesn’t currently exist in NVDA, so to me,
this isn’t screen reading at its best at the moment. That’s only to
me, remember, just one guy who is an advanced screen reader user, and in
that respect, as I’ve always said, NVDA, isn’t there yet. I wish it
would be.
Another example of this problem is the Izotope plug in
installer. NVDA doesn’t see the screen at all, nothing is read, so you
have to OCR it. When I install with JAWS, it sees the screen, and I
can move the mouse to the Next button, but I can’t click it by tabbing nor
object naving to it, because NVDA simply doesn’t see the screen, unless I
OCR it. JAWS sees it out of the box. This is why I still
maintain that video hooking is a necessary evil.
I know now that many programs use UIA now, so it’s less
important, but the ability to manipulate the mouse via the keyboard, is
still much needed when using custom apps.
All the best
Steve
In the following response, I shall give desktop
layout commands. I don't use the laptop layout and don't know those
commands for what we are discussing.
There aren't specifically mouse movement keys such
as in JAWS. Read the review section of the manual or the relevant
parts. 5.5 is a relevant section. I'm not sure if there are any
others. You will see such commands as num[pad 9, move to next line,
numpad 8, read current line, numpad 7 move to and read previous line.
These are review keys and don't affect the application, they review the
screen. I'm talking about what they do in screen review mode.
They have similar functions when in object navigation but they apply to the
object that has focus.
To move the mouse to the review position, use the
command numpad insert numpad slash. To left click the mouse, use
numpad slash. To right click, use numpad Times, which I believe is also
the asterisk. It's immediately to the right of numpad
slash.
If you can't find how to do something in NVDA, it
is not good methodology or procedure to assume that it can't be done.
Asking here may provide information about how to do it or of an add-on that
does.
Gene
----- Original Message
-----
Sent: Monday, February 18, 2019
4:47 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] Golden
Cursor question
Hello Jean,
So what are the mouse movement keys via the keyboard
then? I’m sorry I can’t find them.
Thanks.
All the best
Steve
You can move the mouse with the keyboard now.
You can't move it as precisely. I don't have an opinion about whether
the Golden Cursor features should be incorporated into the source
code. But your implication that the mouse can't be moved without the
Golden Cursor is not correct.
----- Original Message
-----
Sent: Monday, February 18, 2019
2:27 AM
Subject: Re: [nvda] Golden
Cursor question
Jean,
I think the whole Golden Cursor thing should be in NVDA
to be honest. The ability to move the mouse using the keyboard has
been in screen readers, since the invention of Windows.
Supernova has it, System Access has it, JAWS has it,
Window-Eyes was best at it, and so on.
All the best
Steve
The search feature should, I think, be in NVDA, not
in the Golden Cursor. This is important funcionality and is too
important to depend on a user downloading an add-on to have it
available.
----- Original Message
-----
Sent: Sunday, February 17, 2019
1:58 PM
Subject: [nvda] Golden Cursor
question
Hi,
In my efforts to find out if Golden Cursor is as good as
the mouse with JAWS, I’d say not quite. Let me explain.
I just downloaded it, and there seems to be no way to
search for a string of text within GC and have the mouse land on that text,
so you can just click it, without routing, saving positions, etc.
Could this possibly be added? A Mouse Search in
NVDA? I use Search in JAWS cursor all the time, and it moves the mouse
to where I want it.
Or am I really stupid and missing it?
Someone suggested that GC does more than the JAWS cursor,
but I don’t really see that.
All the best
Steve
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