Scrolling in the windows console
Anton Shusharin <antonshusharin01@...>
That did it. Thanks! 10.06.2017 18:42, Michael пишет:
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Michael
I used to pipe it through more, “…|more”.
From:
nvda@nvda.groups.io [mailto:nvda@nvda.groups.io] On Behalf Of Gene
I don't think this is an NVDA issue. I think a sighted person would need to do this as well. If the console is the same in its operation as the DOS prompt, and I haven't looked into the matter at all, but at a DOS prompt, there is a switch you can use that causes output to be displayed by screen/ For example, dir/p causes directory information to be displayed one screen at a time and you use page down to move to the next screen.
Note the slash after dir followed by p. I added that for those who are listening with speech and with punctuation off.
Gene ----- Original Message -----
From: Anton Shusharin Sent: Saturday, June 10, 2017 2:56 AM Subject: [nvda] Scrolling in the windows console
Hi. |
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Brian's Mail list account
There is the other issue which has always plagued command prompt in that the standard paste gives you v in the command line and you have to bring down the menu and paste it in with that instead. I'd have thought these things should have been sorted out by microsoft, after all the dos emulation is just a shell.
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Brian bglists@... Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal email to:- briang1@..., putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field. ----- Original Message -----
From: "Gene" <gsasner@...> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Saturday, June 10, 2017 9:36 AM Subject: Re: [nvda] Scrolling in the windows console I don't think this is an NVDA issue. I think a sighted person would need to do this as well. If the console is the same in its operation as the DOS prompt, and I haven't looked into the matter at all, but at a DOS prompt, there is a switch you can use that causes output to be displayed by screen/ For example, dir/p causes directory information to be displayed one screen at a time and you use page down to move to the next screen. Note the slash after dir followed by p. I added that for those who are listening with speech and with punctuation off. Gene ----- Original Message ----- From: Anton Shusharin Sent: Saturday, June 10, 2017 2:56 AM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: [nvda] Scrolling in the windows console Hi. Sorry if this has been discussed before, but I couldn't find it in the archives. When I enter a command at the command prompt, if the output is very long, only around 30 lines of it are available for review with the review cursor. I can activate the buttons to scroll the output with object navigation, however this results in the text disappearing from the terminal object with only the prompt remaining. So is there a way to review all console output without having to redirect it to a file? |
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Brian's Mail list account
I think you are right here. Its a restriction of the system itself. I don't know if the new shell is any different, as I tend to use the old command prompt one rather than the flashy newer one.
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Brian bglists@... Sent via blueyonder. Please address personal email to:- briang1@..., putting 'Brian Gaff' in the display name field. ----- Original Message -----
From: "Gene" <gsasner@...> To: <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Sent: Saturday, June 10, 2017 9:36 AM Subject: Re: [nvda] Scrolling in the windows console I don't think this is an NVDA issue. I think a sighted person would need to do this as well. If the console is the same in its operation as the DOS prompt, and I haven't looked into the matter at all, but at a DOS prompt, there is a switch you can use that causes output to be displayed by screen/ For example, dir/p causes directory information to be displayed one screen at a time and you use page down to move to the next screen. Note the slash after dir followed by p. I added that for those who are listening with speech and with punctuation off. Gene ----- Original Message ----- From: Anton Shusharin Sent: Saturday, June 10, 2017 2:56 AM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: [nvda] Scrolling in the windows console Hi. Sorry if this has been discussed before, but I couldn't find it in the archives. When I enter a command at the command prompt, if the output is very long, only around 30 lines of it are available for review with the review cursor. I can activate the buttons to scroll the output with object navigation, however this results in the text disappearing from the terminal object with only the prompt remaining. So is there a way to review all console output without having to redirect it to a file? |
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Gene
I don't think this is an NVDA issue. I think
a sighted person would need to do this as well. If the console is the same
in its operation as the DOS prompt, and I haven't looked into the matter at all,
but at a DOS prompt, there is a switch you can use that causes output to be
displayed by screen/ For example, dir/p causes directory information
to be displayed one screen at a time and you use page down to move to the next
screen.
Note the slash after dir followed by p. I
added that for those who are listening with speech and with punctuation
off.
Gene ----- Original Message -----
From: Anton Shusharin
Sent: Saturday, June 10, 2017 2:56 AM
Subject: [nvda] Scrolling in the windows console Sorry if this has been discussed before, but I couldn't find it in the archives. When I enter a command at the command prompt, if the output is very long, only around 30 lines of it are available for review with the review cursor. I can activate the buttons to scroll the output with object navigation, however this results in the text disappearing from the terminal object with only the prompt remaining. So is there a way to review all console output without having to redirect it to a file? |
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antonshusharin01@...
Hi.
Sorry if this has been discussed before, but I couldn't find it in the archives. When I enter a command at the command prompt, if the output is very long, only around 30 lines of it are available for review with the review cursor. I can activate the buttons to scroll the output with object navigation, however this results in the text disappearing from the terminal object with only the prompt remaining. So is there a way to review all console output without having to redirect it to a file? |
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