
E.T.
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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Hi, To answer the synthesizer question (as that's part of what you are using): yes, there is a version of Vocalizer that's compatible with newer NVDA releases. Cheers, Joseph
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
-----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 12:50 PM To: NVDA <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
|
|

E.T.
Is that included or available from another source/. Is it free? Thank you.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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On 6/26/2020 12:52 PM, Joseph Lee wrote: Hi, To answer the synthesizer question (as that's part of what you are using): yes, there is a version of Vocalizer that's compatible with newer NVDA releases. Cheers, Joseph -----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 12:50 PM To: NVDA <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running Windows for some applications. First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it. One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it? When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much. From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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Hi, To find out, we need to know the actual Vocalizer driver version in use, as that'll help us locate the appropriate update. Note that the updated driver requires newer NVDA releases. Cheers, Joseph
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
-----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 12:59 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions Is that included or available from another source/. Is it free? Thank you. From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true? On 6/26/2020 12:52 PM, Joseph Lee wrote: Hi, To answer the synthesizer question (as that's part of what you are using): yes, there is a version of Vocalizer that's compatible with newer NVDA releases. Cheers, Joseph
-----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 12:50 PM To: NVDA <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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Joseph, there are three versions...
From Tiflotecnia, Vocalizer Expressive;
From CodeFactory, Vocalizer Expressive only for NVDA, and;
Also from CodeFactory, Vocalizer Expressive in SAPI5.
All them are paid, but if you already have he license, the update will be free, at least it is free from Tiflotecnia.
Rui Fontes
Tiflotecnia, Lda.
Às 21:07 de 26/06/2020, Joseph Lee escreveu:
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
Hi, To find out, we need to know the actual Vocalizer driver version in use, as that'll help us locate the appropriate update. Note that the updated driver requires newer NVDA releases. Cheers, Joseph
-----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 12:59 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
Is that included or available from another source/. Is it free? Thank you.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
On 6/26/2020 12:52 PM, Joseph Lee wrote:
Hi, To answer the synthesizer question (as that's part of what you are using): yes, there is a version of Vocalizer that's compatible with newer NVDA releases. Cheers, Joseph
-----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 12:50 PM To: NVDA <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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E.T.
Hi, I took a look at what I have and it's Samantha from Code Factory. How would I go about upgrading the voice? Am still running NVDA 2019.2. Thanks.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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On 6/26/2020 3:11 PM, Rui Fontes wrote: Joseph, there are three versions... From Tiflotecnia, Vocalizer Expressive; From CodeFactory, Vocalizer Expressive only for NVDA, and; Also from CodeFactory, Vocalizer Expressive in SAPI5. All them are paid, but if you already have he license, the update will be free, at least it is free from Tiflotecnia. Rui Fontes Tiflotecnia, Lda. Às 21:07 de 26/06/2020, Joseph Lee escreveu:
Hi, To find out, we need to know the actual Vocalizer driver version in use, as that'll help us locate the appropriate update. Note that the updated driver requires newer NVDA releases. Cheers, Joseph
-----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 12:59 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
Is that included or available from another source/. Is it free? Thank you.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
On 6/26/2020 12:52 PM, Joseph Lee wrote:
Hi, To answer the synthesizer question (as that's part of what you are using): yes, there is a version of Vocalizer that's compatible with newer NVDA releases. Cheers, Joseph
-----Original Message----- From: nvda@nvda.groups.io <nvda@nvda.groups.io> On Behalf Of E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 12:50 PM To: NVDA <nvda@nvda.groups.io> Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
|
|
Unknown means something, it could be anything, is unknown to NVDA. NVDA is simply telling you that it doesn't know how to read something. Often, it doesn't matter. If you hear what you should, it doesn't matter. Its just clutter. If you hear unknown instead of what you should hear, then there is a problem and there is probably nothing you can do because the screen-reader itself doesn't know what something is.
I'm not sure what you are asking for in terms of how control plus letter is read. For example, in a new menu, new document may be control n. New message in an e-mail program may be control n. In both cases, you are creating something new, a new document you are going to work with or a new message you are going to write. You must hear control and the letter. Either by itself means nothing.
The purpose of such short ccuts is to avoid opening a menu. You execute a command directly from the program window. You will also hear the menu shortcut when you are moving through a menu. For example, you might hear new message as a menu item, then control n, then a letter. The letter is the short cut you use when you are in the menu. For example, in a file menu new something may have a control n short cut. It may also have a letter, such as d. I've never seen d used in this way, it is an example. Let's say it means document. If you want to use the shortcut that opens the menu, you would use alt f then d for new document. If you want to bypass the menu and use only one command, you would use control n.
Gene
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-----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 2:50 PM To: NVDA Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
|
|

E.T.
Ok I won't worry about the unknown. :)
I know how the menu system works. If one has super memory then knowing all the shortcuts would be fine.
What I am talking about is that NVDA will not read 'ctrl' as 'control' but spells the letters out. Another one might be F3 for find next. NVDA reads that as 'f3n'. I have a hearing impairment so this makes it more difficult to understand.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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On 6/26/2020 4:08 PM, Gene wrote: Unknown means something, it could be anything, is unknown to NVDA. NVDA is simply telling you that it doesn't know how to read something. Often, it doesn't matter. If you hear what you should, it doesn't matter. Its just clutter. If you hear unknown instead of what you should hear, then there is a problem and there is probably nothing you can do because the screen-reader itself doesn't know what something is. I'm not sure what you are asking for in terms of how control plus letter is read. For example, in a new menu, new document may be control n. New message in an e-mail program may be control n. In both cases, you are creating something new, a new document you are going to work with or a new message you are going to write. You must hear control and the letter. Either by itself means nothing. The purpose of such short ccuts is to avoid opening a menu. You execute a command directly from the program window. You will also hear the menu shortcut when you are moving through a menu. For example, you might hear new message as a menu item, then control n, then a letter. The letter is the short cut you use when you are in the menu. For example, in a file menu new something may have a control n short cut. It may also have a letter, such as d. I've never seen d used in this way, it is an example. Let's say it means document. If you want to use the shortcut that opens the menu, you would use alt f then d for new document. If you want to bypass the menu and use only one command, you would use control n. Gene -----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 2:50 PM To: NVDA Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running Windows for some applications. First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it. One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it? When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much. From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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CTRL is used in place of control in many applications. If you
don't like it being read as ctrl, you could always change the text
string in NVDA's speech dictionary.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 27/06/2020 9:37 am, E.T. via
groups.io wrote:
Ok I
won't worry about the unknown. :)
I know how the menu system works. If one has super memory then
knowing all the shortcuts would be fine.
What I am talking about is that NVDA will not read 'ctrl' as
'control' but spells the letters out. Another one might be F3 for
find next. NVDA reads that as 'f3n'. I have a hearing impairment
so this makes it more difficult to understand.
From E.T.'s Keyboard...
Ancient.Aliens@...
Many believe that we have been visited
in the past. What if it were true?
On 6/26/2020 4:08 PM, Gene wrote:
Unknown means something, it could be
anything, is unknown to NVDA. NVDA is simply telling you that
it doesn't know how to read something.
Often, it doesn't matter. If you hear what you should, it
doesn't matter. Its just clutter. If you hear unknown instead
of what you should hear, then there is a problem and there is
probably nothing you can do because the screen-reader itself
doesn't know what something is.
I'm not sure what you are asking for in terms of how control
plus letter is read. For example, in a new menu, new document
may be control n.
New message in an e-mail program may be control n. In both
cases, you are creating something new, a new document you are
going to work with or a new message you are going to write. You
must hear control and the letter. Either by itself means
nothing.
The purpose of such short ccuts is to avoid opening a menu. You
execute a command directly from the program window. You will
also hear the menu shortcut when you are moving through a menu.
For example, you might hear new message as a menu item, then
control n, then a letter. The letter is the short cut you use
when you are in the menu. For example, in a file menu new
something may have a control n short cut. It may also have a
letter, such as d. I've never seen d used in this way, it is an
example. Let's say it means document. If you want to use the
shortcut that opens the menu, you would use alt f then d for new
document. If you want to bypass the menu and use only one
command, you would use control n.
Gene
-----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io
Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 2:50 PM
To: NVDA
Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep
running
Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one
purchased
voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The
purchased
voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear
'unknown'. Not
sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks
the
letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead?
Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard...
Ancient.Aliens@...
Many believe that we have been visited
in the past. What if it were true?
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|

E.T.
That is all I wanted to find out. I did not think the dictionary would handle this kind of element. I will sure try it. Thanks.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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On 6/26/2020 4:45 PM, Sam Taylor via groups.io wrote: CTRL is used in place of control in many applications. If you don't like it being read as ctrl, you could always change the text string in NVDA's speech dictionary. On 27/06/2020 9:37 am, E.T. via groups.io wrote:
Ok I won't worry about the unknown. :)
I know how the menu system works. If one has super memory then knowing all the shortcuts would be fine.
What I am talking about is that NVDA will not read 'ctrl' as 'control' but spells the letters out. Another one might be F3 for find next. NVDA reads that as 'f3n'. I have a hearing impairment so this makes it more difficult to understand.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
On 6/26/2020 4:08 PM, Gene wrote:
Unknown means something, it could be anything, is unknown to NVDA. NVDA is simply telling you that it doesn't know how to read something. Often, it doesn't matter. If you hear what you should, it doesn't matter. Its just clutter. If you hear unknown instead of what you should hear, then there is a problem and there is probably nothing you can do because the screen-reader itself doesn't know what something is.
I'm not sure what you are asking for in terms of how control plus letter is read. For example, in a new menu, new document may be control n. New message in an e-mail program may be control n. In both cases, you are creating something new, a new document you are going to work with or a new message you are going to write. You must hear control and the letter. Either by itself means nothing.
The purpose of such short ccuts is to avoid opening a menu. You execute a command directly from the program window. You will also hear the menu shortcut when you are moving through a menu. For example, you might hear new message as a menu item, then control n, then a letter. The letter is the short cut you use when you are in the menu. For example, in a file menu new something may have a control n short cut. It may also have a letter, such as d. I've never seen d used in this way, it is an example. Let's say it means document. If you want to use the shortcut that opens the menu, you would use alt f then d for new document. If you want to bypass the menu and use only one command, you would use control n.
Gene -----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 2:50 PM To: NVDA Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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On Fri, 26 Jun 2020, E.T. via groups.io wrote: Ok I won't worry about the unknown. :) You can always try running the Com registration fixing tool from the tools menu of NVDA, to try to fix your unknowns. It may or may not help, but it won't hurt. What I am talking about is that NVDA will not read 'ctrl' as 'control' but spells the letters out. Another one might be F3 for find next. NVDA reads that as 'f3n'. I have a hearing impairment so this makes it more difficult to understand. Actually, you're hearing two things there. If you're in the edit menu, and there is a find next command, pressing "n" will get you to it. However if you're not in the edit menu, and you just want to do a find next from where-ever you happen to be, then you would use "F3", which is your third function key. So you are hearing F3, N (two separate commands). Both are ways to get to find next, but they are different ways of getting there. You can either press alt+e, then n; or you can press F3. Luke
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But it is common to have NVDA say unknown in a browser and continue reading properly. the registration fixing tool is for fixing problems where all you hear or almost all you hear in some browsers is the word unknown and almost nothing is read. It also corrects other problems but I don't recall just what they are. There is no harm in running the utility but I don't think anything is wrong. Gene Original Message----- From: Luke Davis Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 6:51 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions On Fri, 26 Jun 2020, E.T. via groups.io wrote: Ok I won't worry about the unknown. :) You can always try running the Com registration fixing tool from the tools menu of NVDA, to try to fix your unknowns. It may or may not help, but it won't hurt. What I am talking about is that NVDA will not read 'ctrl' as 'control' but spells the letters out. Another one might be F3 for find next. NVDA reads that as 'f3n'. I have a hearing impairment so this makes it more difficult to understand. Actually, you're hearing two things there. If you're in the edit menu, and there is a find next command, pressing "n" will get you to it. However if you're not in the edit menu, and you just want to do a find next from where-ever you happen to be, then you would use "F3", which is your third function key. So you are hearing F3, N (two separate commands). Both are ways to get to find next, but they are different ways of getting there. You can either press alt+e, then n; or you can press F3. Luke
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That sounds to me like a synthesizer problem. Spelling control never happens to me. The word control as in "control n" is spoken. What happens when you try another synthesizer?
Gene
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
-----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 6:37 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions Ok I won't worry about the unknown. :) I know how the menu system works. If one has super memory then knowing all the shortcuts would be fine. What I am talking about is that NVDA will not read 'ctrl' as 'control' but spells the letters out. Another one might be F3 for find next. NVDA reads that as 'f3n'. I have a hearing impairment so this makes it more difficult to understand. From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true? On 6/26/2020 4:08 PM, Gene wrote: Unknown means something, it could be anything, is unknown to NVDA. NVDA is simply telling you that it doesn't know how to read something. Often, it doesn't matter. If you hear what you should, it doesn't matter. Its just clutter. If you hear unknown instead of what you should hear, then there is a problem and there is probably nothing you can do because the screen-reader itself doesn't know what something is.
I'm not sure what you are asking for in terms of how control plus letter is read. For example, in a new menu, new document may be control n. New message in an e-mail program may be control n. In both cases, you are creating something new, a new document you are going to work with or a new message you are going to write. You must hear control and the letter. Either by itself means nothing.
The purpose of such short ccuts is to avoid opening a menu. You execute a command directly from the program window. You will also hear the menu shortcut when you are moving through a menu. For example, you might hear new message as a menu item, then control n, then a letter. The letter is the short cut you use when you are in the menu. For example, in a file menu new something may have a control n short cut. It may also have a letter, such as d. I've never seen d used in this way, it is an example. Let's say it means document. If you want to use the shortcut that opens the menu, you would use alt f then d for new document. If you want to bypass the menu and use only one command, you would use control n.
Gene -----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 2:50 PM To: NVDA Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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|
True, both ESpeak and the OneCore voices speak C T R L as
control.
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 27/06/2020 12:07 pm, Gene wrote:
That sounds
to me like a synthesizer problem. Spelling control never happens
to me. The word control as in "control n" is spoken. What
happens when you try another synthesizer?
Gene
-----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io
Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 6:37 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
Ok I won't worry about the unknown. :)
I know how the menu system works. If one has super memory then
knowing all the shortcuts would be fine.
What I am talking about is that NVDA will not read 'ctrl' as
'control' but spells the letters out. Another one might be F3 for
find
next. NVDA reads that as 'f3n'. I have a hearing impairment so
this
makes it more difficult to understand.
From E.T.'s Keyboard...
Ancient.Aliens@...
Many believe that we have been visited
in the past. What if it were true?
On 6/26/2020 4:08 PM, Gene wrote:
Unknown means something, it could be
anything, is unknown to NVDA. NVDA is simply telling you that
it doesn't know how to read something.
Often, it doesn't matter. If you hear what you should, it
doesn't matter. Its just clutter. If you hear unknown instead
of what you should hear, then there is a problem and there is
probably nothing you can do because the screen-reader itself
doesn't know what something is.
I'm not sure what you are asking for in terms of how control
plus letter is read. For example, in a new menu, new document
may be control n.
New message in an e-mail program may be control n. In both
cases, you are creating something new, a new document you are
going to work with or a new message you are going to write. You
must hear control and the letter. Either by itself means
nothing.
The purpose of such short ccuts is to avoid opening a menu. You
execute a command directly from the program window. You will
also hear the menu shortcut when you are moving through a menu.
For example, you might hear new message as a menu item, then
control n, then a letter. The letter is the short cut you use
when you are in the menu. For example, in a file menu new
something may have a control n short cut. It may also have a
letter, such as d. I've never seen d used in this way, it is an
example. Let's say it means document. If you want to use the
shortcut that opens the menu, you would use alt f then d for new
document. If you want to bypass the menu and use only one
command, you would use control n.
Gene
-----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io
Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 2:50 PM
To: NVDA
Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep
running
Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one
purchased
voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The
purchased
voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear
'unknown'. Not
sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks
the
letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead?
Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard...
Ancient.Aliens@...
Many believe that we have been visited
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Also, if you are going to use the speech dictionary, you need to know how the program displays the term. It isn't written out. It is cntrl. You have to use cntrl in the word field.
Gene
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-----Original Message----- From: Gene Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 9:07 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions That sounds to me like a synthesizer problem. Spelling control never happens to me. The word control as in "control n" is spoken. What happens when you try another synthesizer? Gene -----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 6:37 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions Ok I won't worry about the unknown. :) I know how the menu system works. If one has super memory then knowing all the shortcuts would be fine. What I am talking about is that NVDA will not read 'ctrl' as 'control' but spells the letters out. Another one might be F3 for find next. NVDA reads that as 'f3n'. I have a hearing impairment so this makes it more difficult to understand. From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true? On 6/26/2020 4:08 PM, Gene wrote: Unknown means something, it could be anything, is unknown to NVDA. NVDA is simply telling you that it doesn't know how to read something. Often, it doesn't matter. If you hear what you should, it doesn't matter. Its just clutter. If you hear unknown instead of what you should hear, then there is a problem and there is probably nothing you can do because the screen-reader itself doesn't know what something is.
I'm not sure what you are asking for in terms of how control plus letter is read. For example, in a new menu, new document may be control n. New message in an e-mail program may be control n. In both cases, you are creating something new, a new document you are going to work with or a new message you are going to write. You must hear control and the letter. Either by itself means nothing.
The purpose of such short ccuts is to avoid opening a menu. You execute a command directly from the program window. You will also hear the menu shortcut when you are moving through a menu. For example, you might hear new message as a menu item, then control n, then a letter. The letter is the short cut you use when you are in the menu. For example, in a file menu new something may have a control n short cut. It may also have a letter, such as d. I've never seen d used in this way, it is an example. Let's say it means document. If you want to use the shortcut that opens the menu, you would use alt f then d for new document. If you want to bypass the menu and use only one command, you would use control n.
Gene -----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 2:50 PM To: NVDA Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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E.T.
I have tried quite few voices but ended up with buying Samantha. Yes perhaps that is where the issue is but I added that to the dictionary and its fine now. But now I wonder if it is Samantha that is adding letters to the menu items as I posted earlier.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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On 6/26/2020 7:07 PM, Gene wrote: That sounds to me like a synthesizer problem. Spelling control never happens to me. The word control as in "control n" is spoken. What happens when you try another synthesizer? Gene -----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 6:37 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions Ok I won't worry about the unknown. :) I know how the menu system works. If one has super memory then knowing all the shortcuts would be fine. What I am talking about is that NVDA will not read 'ctrl' as 'control' but spells the letters out. Another one might be F3 for find next. NVDA reads that as 'f3n'. I have a hearing impairment so this makes it more difficult to understand. From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true? On 6/26/2020 4:08 PM, Gene wrote:
Unknown means something, it could be anything, is unknown to NVDA. NVDA is simply telling you that it doesn't know how to read something. Often, it doesn't matter. If you hear what you should, it doesn't matter. Its just clutter. If you hear unknown instead of what you should hear, then there is a problem and there is probably nothing you can do because the screen-reader itself doesn't know what something is.
I'm not sure what you are asking for in terms of how control plus letter is read. For example, in a new menu, new document may be control n. New message in an e-mail program may be control n. In both cases, you are creating something new, a new document you are going to work with or a new message you are going to write. You must hear control and the letter. Either by itself means nothing.
The purpose of such short ccuts is to avoid opening a menu. You execute a command directly from the program window. You will also hear the menu shortcut when you are moving through a menu. For example, you might hear new message as a menu item, then control n, then a letter. The letter is the short cut you use when you are in the menu. For example, in a file menu new something may have a control n short cut. It may also have a letter, such as d. I've never seen d used in this way, it is an example. Let's say it means document. If you want to use the shortcut that opens the menu, you would use alt f then d for new document. If you want to bypass the menu and use only one command, you would use control n.
Gene -----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 2:50 PM To: NVDA Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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No, the letters observed in menus can be disabled by turning off
the reporting of object shortcut keys.
This is found under NVDA's settings in the object presentation
category.
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On 27/06/2020 1:01 pm, E.T. via groups.io wrote:
I
have tried quite few voices but ended up with buying Samantha.
Yes perhaps that is where the issue is but I added that to the
dictionary and its fine now. But now I wonder if it is Samantha
that is adding letters to the menu items as I posted earlier.
From E.T.'s Keyboard...
Ancient.Aliens@...
Many believe that we have been visited
in the past. What if it were true?
On 6/26/2020 7:07 PM, Gene wrote:
That sounds to me like a synthesizer
problem. Spelling control never happens to me. The word
control as in "control n" is spoken. What happens when you try
another synthesizer?
Gene
-----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io
Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 6:37 PM
To: nvda@nvda.groups.io
Subject: Re: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
Ok I won't worry about the unknown. :)
I know how the menu system works. If one has super memory
then
knowing all the shortcuts would be fine.
What I am talking about is that NVDA will not read 'ctrl' as
'control' but spells the letters out. Another one might be F3
for find
next. NVDA reads that as 'f3n'. I have a hearing impairment so
this
makes it more difficult to understand.
From E.T.'s Keyboard...
Ancient.Aliens@...
Many believe that we have been visited
in the past. What if it were true?
On 6/26/2020 4:08 PM, Gene wrote:
Unknown means something, it could be
anything, is unknown to NVDA.
NVDA is simply telling you that it doesn't know how to read
something.
Often, it doesn't matter. If you hear what you should, it
doesn't matter. Its just clutter. If you hear unknown instead
of what you should hear, then there is a problem and there is
probably nothing you can do because the screen-reader itself
doesn't know what something is.
I'm not sure what you are asking for in terms of how control
plus letter is read. For example, in a new menu, new document
may be control n.
New message in an e-mail program may be control n. In both
cases, you are creating something new, a new document you are
going to work with or a new message you are going to write.
You must hear control and the letter. Either by itself means
nothing.
The purpose of such short ccuts is to avoid opening a menu.
You execute a command directly from the program window. You
will also hear the menu shortcut when you are moving through a
menu. For example, you might hear new message as a menu item,
then control n, then a letter. The letter is the short cut
you use when you are in the menu. For example, in a file menu
new something may have a control n short cut. It may also
have a letter, such as d. I've never seen d used in this way,
it is an example. Let's say it means document. If you want to
use the shortcut that opens the menu, you would use alt f then
d for new document. If you want to bypass the menu and use
only one command, you would use control n.
Gene
-----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io
Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 2:50 PM
To: NVDA
Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep
running
Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one
purchased
voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The
purchased
voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear
'unknown'. Not
sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks
the
letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead?
Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard...
Ancient.Aliens@...
Many believe that we have been visited
in the past. What if it were true?
|
|

E.T.
Ahh thanks, much better! :)
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
toggle quoted messageShow quoted text
On 6/26/2020 9:47 PM, Sam Taylor via groups.io wrote: No, the letters observed in menus can be disabled by turning off the reporting of object shortcut keys. This is found under NVDA's settings in the object presentation category. On 27/06/2020 1:01 pm, E.T. via groups.io wrote:
I have tried quite few voices but ended up with buying Samantha. Yes perhaps that is where the issue is but I added that to the dictionary and its fine now. But now I wonder if it is Samantha that is adding letters to the menu items as I posted earlier.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
On 6/26/2020 7:07 PM, Gene wrote:
That sounds to me like a synthesizer problem. Spelling control never happens to me. The word control as in "control n" is spoken. What happens when you try another synthesizer?
Gene -----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 6:37 PM To: nvda@nvda.groups.io Subject: Re: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
Ok I won't worry about the unknown. :)
I know how the menu system works. If one has super memory then knowing all the shortcuts would be fine.
What I am talking about is that NVDA will not read 'ctrl' as 'control' but spells the letters out. Another one might be F3 for find next. NVDA reads that as 'f3n'. I have a hearing impairment so this makes it more difficult to understand.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
On 6/26/2020 4:08 PM, Gene wrote:
Unknown means something, it could be anything, is unknown to NVDA. NVDA is simply telling you that it doesn't know how to read something. Often, it doesn't matter. If you hear what you should, it doesn't matter. Its just clutter. If you hear unknown instead of what you should hear, then there is a problem and there is probably nothing you can do because the screen-reader itself doesn't know what something is.
I'm not sure what you are asking for in terms of how control plus letter is read. For example, in a new menu, new document may be control n. New message in an e-mail program may be control n. In both cases, you are creating something new, a new document you are going to work with or a new message you are going to write. You must hear control and the letter. Either by itself means nothing.
The purpose of such short ccuts is to avoid opening a menu. You execute a command directly from the program window. You will also hear the menu shortcut when you are moving through a menu. For example, you might hear new message as a menu item, then control n, then a letter. The letter is the short cut you use when you are in the menu. For example, in a file menu new something may have a control n short cut. It may also have a letter, such as d. I've never seen d used in this way, it is an example. Let's say it means document. If you want to use the shortcut that opens the menu, you would use alt f then d for new document. If you want to bypass the menu and use only one command, you would use control n.
Gene -----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 2:50 PM To: NVDA Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions
I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running Windows for some applications.
First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it.
One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it?
When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much.
From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@icloud.com Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true?
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HiIt’s more to do with the synthesizer in use. For example if I use Notepad and open the file menu, the first item is voiced as “New control+n n”, indicating I can use Alt+f n or Control+n to open a new notepad document. If I check this menu entry by letter it is actually written as “New Ctrl+n n” and it’s the synthesizer in my case Onecore Mark that speaks C T R L as Control, not NVDA. I realise this is the opposite of what you are getting but you could always put an entry in the synthesizer dictionary, replacing cntrl with Control whenever it is encountered but be careful you do not compromise other word pronunciations, particularly in the case of the “ctl” abbreviation of Control. Cheers Chris
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From: E.T. via groups.ioSent: 27 June 2020 00:37 To: nvda@nvda.groups.ioSubject: Re: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions Ok I won't worry about the unknown. :) I know how the menu system works. If one has super memory then knowing all the shortcuts would be fine. What I am talking about is that NVDA will not read 'ctrl' as 'control' but spells the letters out. Another one might be F3 for find next. NVDA reads that as 'f3n'. I have a hearing impairment so this makes it more difficult to understand. From E.T.'s Keyboard... Ancient.Aliens@... Many believe that we have been visited in the past. What if it were true? On 6/26/2020 4:08 PM, Gene wrote: > Unknown means something, it could be anything, is unknown to NVDA. NVDA > is simply telling you that it doesn't know how to read something. > Often, it doesn't matter. If you hear what you should, it doesn't > matter. Its just clutter. If you hear unknown instead of what you > should hear, then there is a problem and there is probably nothing you > can do because the screen-reader itself doesn't know what something is. > > I'm not sure what you are asking for in terms of how control plus letter > is read. For example, in a new menu, new document may be control n. > New message in an e-mail program may be control n. In both cases, you > are creating something new, a new document you are going to work with or > a new message you are going to write. You must hear control and the > letter. Either by itself means nothing. > > The purpose of such short ccuts is to avoid opening a menu. You execute > a command directly from the program window. You will also hear the menu > shortcut when you are moving through a menu. For example, you might > hear new message as a menu item, then control n, then a letter. The > letter is the short cut you use when you are in the menu. For example, > in a file menu new something may have a control n short cut. It may > also have a letter, such as d. I've never seen d used in this way, it > is an example. Let's say it means document. If you want to use the > shortcut that opens the menu, you would use alt f then d for new > document. If you want to bypass the menu and use only one command, you > would use control n. > > Gene > -----Original Message----- From: E.T. via groups.io > Sent: Friday, June 26, 2020 2:50 PM > To: NVDA > Subject: [nvda] Some NVDA Questions > > I am more comfortable with Voiceover but need to keep running > Windows for some applications. > > First, I'm still using NVDA 2019.2 because I have one purchased > voice. Have any new voices been added to later versions? The purchased > voice is Voiceover's Samantha voice or close to it. > > One web pages, and maybe elsewhere, sometimes I hear 'unknown'. Not > sure what element is spoken that way. Can I change it? > > When NVDA speaks shortcuts, for example, ctrl-a, it speaks the > letters. Can I change this so 'control' is spoken instead? Thanks much. > > From E.T.'s Keyboard... > Ancient.Aliens@... > Many believe that we have been visited > in the past. What if it were true? > > > > > >
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