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Question regarding browse mode and object mode using web browser
Meet modi
Hello friends,
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hello.
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brows mode is for quick navigation between elements of web pages like headings, links, tables, edit boxes etc. but focus mode for filling form modes and editable filds.
On 6/4/19, Meet modi <meetmodi2359@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello friends, --
By God, were I given all the seven heavens with all they contain in order that I may disobey God by depriving an ant from the husk of a grain of barley, I would not do it. imam ali
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Gene
When you work with a document, such as in a word
processor, there is a cursor you use to move around the page. Browsers
don't have cursors, except in edit fields. So browse mode creates a
virtual cursor so you can move around the page as though there were a real
one. You can thus use all standard Windows movement commands for
documents, move by line, by word, use read to end, etc. You can use quick
navigation commands as well, such as move by heading but those are features, not
the actual reason for the virtual PC cursor.
When you want to do certain things, such as write
in an edit field, you need to either manually turn browse mode off, or have NVDA
set to automatically turn it off, which is the default. That's because
when you are in forms mode, you aren't dealing directly with the page. It
is reformatted by browse mode for logical reading with a screen-reader. If
it weren't reformated, you might hear things like links that run along the sides
of a lot of pages being read along with the text you want to hear. Browse
mode puts those links either at the top of the page or at the bottom. The
links along the left side of the actual page are placed at the top, and the ones
to the right are placed at the bottom.
Gene
----- Original Message -----
From: Meet modi
Sent: Monday, June 03, 2019 10:27 PM
Subject: [nvda] Question regarding browse mode and object mode using
web browser Hello friends,
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