Can someone enlighten me as to how to create a shortcut key for reading all selected text? I have no idea how this is done, and am sorry to be so far behind some of you in terms of technological no how! :)
Olivia

On Feb 8, 2008, at 8:23 PM, yvonne thomson wrote:


On 09/02/2008, at 11:17 AM, Esther wrote:


I don't think there's a general prescription for key combinations if
you're defining them for "All Applications".  I was surprised to find
that my key combination for Yvonne's suggested "Start Speaking
Selected Text" worked if I didn't start it in VoiceOver. If I selected text, then used the keyboard shortcut that I'd made for "All Applications"
nothing would happen.  (I'd taken the precaution of restarting my
computer after making the keyboard shortcut assignment since this
was for "All Applications").  However, when I toggled VoiceOver off,
and then gave the same keyboard shortcut, and toggled VoiceOver
on again, everything worked.  Since the text selection was already
made, whether VoiceOver was on or off did not affect the selection
being sent to the keyboard shortcut, and this started speaking
as soon as I gave my assigned shortcut keys. I turned VoiceOver
on again right away.

The sequence I chose doesn't seem to work when I have VoiceOver
on.  Maybe another one will work.  As far as I know, this sequence
doesn't appear in any of the lists of VoiceOver keyboard shortcuts
and doesn't do anything in any app that I've tried it in before making
the assignment.

Hi.

That's really odd. I certainly don't have to stop VO to use this trick, or I'd've mentioned it. Incidentally, the key combination I'm using right now for this is control cmd slash.

In my experience, control and command aren't usually used by other apps for things, and if you use a punctuation key, it's even less likely, so Most of my all applications shortcuts use those.

The other thing that might be worth trying are the function keys. I've found most apps don't use those either, particularly, I'd guess, when combined with modifiers, e.g. shift, option, that kind of thing. When you're talking shortcut keys, particularly global ones, my advice is, go really obscure. Punctuation, weird modifier combinations, that sort of thing and of course, although this should probably go without saying, nothing using the VO key prefix, <grin>.






Reply via email to