Hi folks
Last question before Easter,
When reading texts line per line, NVDA always announces empty line when it
encounters one.
Can this be set off?
Regards
Davy
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Hi,
I have found one way : add an entry in the dictionnary, with input ^empty$ (assuming nvda tells you empty for empty lines) replaced by nothing. Select regular expression as type.
The side effect would be that it probably not read any line, button or any other object containing only the word empty. But so far I have found no better way.
-- Patrick.
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Le 25/03/2016 17:37, Davy Cuppens a écrit : Hi folks Last question before Easter, When reading texts line per line, NVDA always announces empty line when it encounters one. Can this be set off? Regards Davy
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and ===== can be equally annoying :D why not say ten equals instead of repeating over and over :(
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On 26/03/2016 11:26, Patrick Le Baudour wrote: Hi,
I have found one way : add an entry in the dictionnary, with input ^empty$ (assuming nvda tells you empty for empty lines) replaced by nothing. Select regular expression as type.
The side effect would be that it probably not read any line, button or any other object containing only the word empty. But so far I have found no better way.
-- Patrick.
Le 25/03/2016 17:37, Davy Cuppens a écrit :
Hi folks Last question before Easter, When reading texts line per line, NVDA always announces empty line when it encounters one. Can this be set off? Regards Davy
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|
I don't understand what you are saying. ========== comes out as 10 = on my end.
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On 3/26/16, Chris <chrismedley@btinternet.com> wrote: and ===== can be equally annoying :D why not say ten equals instead of repeating over and over :(
On 26/03/2016 11:26, Patrick Le Baudour wrote:
Hi,
I have found one way : add an entry in the dictionnary, with input ^empty$ (assuming nvda tells you empty for empty lines) replaced by nothing. Select regular expression as type.
The side effect would be that it probably not read any line, button or any other object containing only the word empty. But so far I have found no better way.
-- Patrick.
Le 25/03/2016 17:37, Davy Cuppens a écrit :
Hi folks Last question before Easter, When reading texts line per line, NVDA always announces empty line when it encounters one. Can this be set off? Regards Davy
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|
Hi Cris May be there are five equal signs a space then five more and so on repeating the equal sign space combination. like below: ===== ===== ===== ===== not sure how to tell nvda / espeak dictionary how it should say this. Pete
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On 3/27/2016 12:03 PM, Andre Fisher wrote: I don't understand what you are saying. ========== comes out as 10 = on my end.
On 3/26/16, Chris <chrismedley@btinternet.com> wrote:
and ===== can be equally annoying :D why not say ten equals instead of repeating over and over :(
On 26/03/2016 11:26, Patrick Le Baudour wrote:
Hi,
I have found one way : add an entry in the dictionnary, with input ^empty$ (assuming nvda tells you empty for empty lines) replaced by nothing. Select regular expression as type.
The side effect would be that it probably not read any line, button or any other object containing only the word empty. But so far I have found no better way.
-- Patrick.
Le 25/03/2016 17:37, Davy Cuppens a écrit :
Hi folks Last question before Easter, When reading texts line per line, NVDA always announces empty line when it encounters one. Can this be set off? Regards Davy
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|
go to bottom of this message and you see what i mean
just above the signature
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 27/03/2016 17:03, Andre Fisher wrote: I don't understand what you are saying. ========== comes out as 10 = on my end.
On 3/26/16, Chris <chrismedley@btinternet.com> wrote:
and ===== can be equally annoying :D why not say ten equals instead of repeating over and over :(
On 26/03/2016 11:26, Patrick Le Baudour wrote:
Hi,
I have found one way : add an entry in the dictionnary, with input ^empty$ (assuming nvda tells you empty for empty lines) replaced by nothing. Select regular expression as type.
The side effect would be that it probably not read any line, button or any other object containing only the word empty. But so far I have found no better way.
-- Patrick.
Le 25/03/2016 17:37, Davy Cuppens a écrit :
Hi folks Last question before Easter, When reading texts line per line, NVDA always announces empty line when it encounters one. Can this be set off? Regards Davy
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|
yeah thats what ieant mate
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On 27/03/2016 19:20, Pete wrote: Hi Cris May be there are five equal signs a space then five more and so on repeating the equal sign space combination. like below: ===== ===== ===== ===== not sure how to tell nvda / espeak dictionary how it should say this. Pete
On 3/27/2016 12:03 PM, Andre Fisher wrote:
I don't understand what you are saying. ========== comes out as 10 = on my end.
On 3/26/16, Chris <chrismedley@btinternet.com> wrote:
and ===== can be equally annoying :D why not say ten equals instead of repeating over and over :(
On 26/03/2016 11:26, Patrick Le Baudour wrote:
Hi,
I have found one way : add an entry in the dictionnary, with input ^empty$ (assuming nvda tells you empty for empty lines) replaced by nothing. Select regular expression as type.
The side effect would be that it probably not read any line, button or any other object containing only the word empty. But so far I have found no better way.
-- Patrick.
Le 25/03/2016 17:37, Davy Cuppens a écrit :
Hi folks Last question before Easter, When reading texts line per line, NVDA always announces empty line when it encounters one. Can this be set off? Regards Davy
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|
It's a line of equals and dashes. At the second level of punctuation showing, it comes out as only equals. You could always add a dictionary entry with "(-=)+-" as input.
-- Patrick
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Le 27/03/2016 21:30, Chris a écrit : go to bottom of this message and you see what i mean
just above the signature
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at the bottom I just have one blank line. The equals equals equals and so on is realy equals dash equals dash equals dash and so on. If it's a solid line of equals with no spaces or other symbols I think nvda will say the character 3 to 5 times and then say how many are there. What is the colon cap d after the five equals message? Pete
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 3/27/2016 3:30 PM, Chris wrote: go to bottom of this message and you see what i mean
just above the signature
On 27/03/2016 17:03, Andre Fisher wrote:
I don't understand what you are saying. ========== comes out as 10 = on my end.
On 3/26/16, Chris <chrismedley@btinternet.com> wrote:
and ===== can be equally annoying :D why not say ten equals instead of repeating over and over :(
On 26/03/2016 11:26, Patrick Le Baudour wrote:
Hi,
I have found one way : add an entry in the dictionnary, with input ^empty$ (assuming nvda tells you empty for empty lines) replaced by nothing. Select regular expression as type.
The side effect would be that it probably not read any line, button or any other object containing only the word empty. But so far I have found no better way.
-- Patrick.
Le 25/03/2016 17:37, Davy Cuppens a écrit :
Hi folks Last question before Easter, When reading texts line per line, NVDA always announces empty line when it encounters one. Can this be set off? Regards Davy
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|
Here nvda says blank for empty lines. Pete
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 3/27/2016 4:53 PM, Pete wrote: at the bottom I just have one blank line. The equals equals equals and so on is realy equals dash equals dash equals dash and so on. If it's a solid line of equals with no spaces or other symbols I think nvda will say the character 3 to 5 times and then say how many are there. What is the colon cap d after the five equals message? Pete On 3/27/2016 3:30 PM, Chris wrote:
go to bottom of this message and you see what i mean
just above the signature
On 27/03/2016 17:03, Andre Fisher wrote:
I don't understand what you are saying. ========== comes out as 10 = on my end.
On 3/26/16, Chris <chrismedley@btinternet.com> wrote:
and ===== can be equally annoying :D why not say ten equals instead of repeating over and over :(
On 26/03/2016 11:26, Patrick Le Baudour wrote:
Hi,
I have found one way : add an entry in the dictionnary, with input ^empty$ (assuming nvda tells you empty for empty lines) replaced by nothing. Select regular expression as type.
The side effect would be that it probably not read any line, button or any other object containing only the word empty. But so far I have found no better way.
-- Patrick.
Le 25/03/2016 17:37, Davy Cuppens a écrit :
Hi folks Last question before Easter, When reading texts line per line, NVDA always announces empty line when it encounters one. Can this be set off? Regards Davy
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|
laughing smiley :D well jthats what nvda tells me anyway :D
cheers
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 27/03/2016 21:53, Pete wrote: at the bottom I just have one blank line. The equals equals equals and so on is realy equals dash equals dash equals dash and so on. If it's a solid line of equals with no spaces or other symbols I think nvda will say the character 3 to 5 times and then say how many are there. What is the colon cap d after the five equals message? Pete On 3/27/2016 3:30 PM, Chris wrote:
go to bottom of this message and you see what i mean
just above the signature
On 27/03/2016 17:03, Andre Fisher wrote:
I don't understand what you are saying. ========== comes out as 10 = on my end.
On 3/26/16, Chris <chrismedley@btinternet.com> wrote:
and ===== can be equally annoying :D why not say ten equals instead of repeating over and over :(
On 26/03/2016 11:26, Patrick Le Baudour wrote:
Hi,
I have found one way : add an entry in the dictionnary, with input ^empty$ (assuming nvda tells you empty for empty lines) replaced by nothing. Select regular expression as type.
The side effect would be that it probably not read any line, button or any other object containing only the word empty. But so far I have found no better way.
-- Patrick.
Le 25/03/2016 17:37, Davy Cuppens a écrit :
Hi folks Last question before Easter, When reading texts line per line, NVDA always announces empty line when it encounters one. Can this be set off? Regards Davy
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o k LOL
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 3/27/2016 5:01 PM, Chris wrote: laughing smiley :D well jthats what nvda tells me anyway :D
cheers
On 27/03/2016 21:53, Pete wrote:
at the bottom I just have one blank line. The equals equals equals and so on is realy equals dash equals dash equals dash and so on. If it's a solid line of equals with no spaces or other symbols I think nvda will say the character 3 to 5 times and then say how many are there. What is the colon cap d after the five equals message? Pete On 3/27/2016 3:30 PM, Chris wrote:
go to bottom of this message and you see what i mean
just above the signature
On 27/03/2016 17:03, Andre Fisher wrote:
I don't understand what you are saying. ========== comes out as 10 = on my end.
On 3/26/16, Chris <chrismedley@btinternet.com> wrote:
and ===== can be equally annoying :D why not say ten equals instead of repeating over and over :(
On 26/03/2016 11:26, Patrick Le Baudour wrote:
Hi,
I have found one way : add an entry in the dictionnary, with input ^empty$ (assuming nvda tells you empty for empty lines) replaced by nothing. Select regular expression as type.
The side effect would be that it probably not read any line, button or any other object containing only the word empty. But so far I have found no better way.
-- Patrick.
Le 25/03/2016 17:37, Davy Cuppens a écrit :
Hi folks Last question before Easter, When reading texts line per line, NVDA always announces empty line when it encounters one. Can this be set off? Regards Davy
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