No, it won't prevent the event from firing -- there's not a way to do that. But it will prevent Window-Eyes from seeing the event. If something speaks when Window-Eyes is ignoring the event, then some other script or something is causing the speaking.

Aaron

Juan Hernandez wrote:
Yeah, it would.

Blocking the event will prevent the event from firing right?

Thanks.
-----Original Message-----
From: Aaron Smith [mailto:aa...@gwmicro.com] Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2008 10:13 AM
To: gw-scripting@gwmicro.com
Subject: Re: msaa event source

Juan Hernandez wrote:
So, if I get what you are saying, maybe I should block all of the events, all 50 msaa events, and then have window-eyes handle all of the events directly via the script? Is this overkill?

Well, that would certainly tell you whether or not the extra speech is
coming from MSAA, or somewhere else.

Aaron

--
To insure that you receive proper support, please include all past
correspondence (where applicable), and any relevant information pertinent to
your situation when submitting a problem report to the GW Micro Technical
Support Team.

Aaron Smith
GW Micro
Phone: 260/489-3671
Fax: 260/489-2608
WWW: http://www.gwmicro.com
FTP: ftp://ftp.gwmicro.com
Technical Support & Web Development


--
To insure that you receive proper support, please include all past
correspondence (where applicable), and any relevant information
pertinent to your situation when submitting a problem report to the GW
Micro Technical Support Team.

Aaron Smith
GW Micro
Phone: 260/489-3671
Fax: 260/489-2608
WWW: http://www.gwmicro.com
FTP: ftp://ftp.gwmicro.com
Technical Support & Web Development

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