They never got to implementing that feature although when it first came out
they were planning on doing it.

David Ferrin
ow...@jaws-users.com
Always be yourself because the people that matter don't mind, and the ones
that mind don't matter.

-----Original Message-----
From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:jaws-users-list-boun...@jaws-users.com] On
Behalf Of LeDon
Sent: Tuesday, July 29, 2014 6:45 PM
To: jaws-users-list@jaws-users.com
Subject: Re: [JAWS-Users] i e question

Can Flexible web rules be exchanged? For example if you and I go to MSN.com
and you have a rule for that page and I like it can I use the rule that you
have created for that site? If so, how are rules exchanged? Thank you.

-----Original Message-----
From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:jaws-users-list-boun...@jaws-users.com] On
Behalf Of Øyvind Lode
Sent: Tuesday, July 29, 2014 4:24 AM
To: jaws-users-list@jaws-users.com
Subject: Re: [JAWS-Users] i e question

Press ESC to stop loading the page or ctrl+f4 to close the window/tab
entirely.

>From JAWS help regarding Flexible web:

Flexible Web
Frequently, you will encounter Web pages that contain a lot of excess
content which can make it difficult to locate the actual content you want,
or interupts the flow when reading. For instance, many sites contain Google
ad frames. These can be troublesome for JAWS users as they disrupt the
reading order of surrounding content.

Flexible Web enables you to take more control of Web pages by allowing you
to quickly find the content you are looking for, as well as hide content
that interrupts the reading experience. You can hide sections of content,
such as Google ad frames or other types of unnecessary content, for a
smoother reading experience. In addition, you could have JAWS begin reading
at a level one heading, or ARIA main region, as these may contain the most
interesting content.

To use Flexible Web, open a Web page you want to customize in Internet
Explorer or Firefox. Then, move the Virtual PC Cursor to the page element
you want to hide, or from where you want to start reading when the page
first loads. Activate the Flexible Web wizard by pressing the layered
keystroke INSERT+SPACEBAR, X. Alternatively, press INSERT+F2 to open the Run
JAWS Manager dialog box, then choose Flexible Web.

Through several easy-to-follow steps, The Flexible Web wizard that opens
provides you with two options: hide, or start reading at the selected
element. The wizard then guides you through the process of creating a
temporary customization by giving you various choices about the selected
element and how you want to hide it or from where exactly to start reading.
Once the customization has been made, it is immediately applied to the page.
For instance, if you choose to hide all frames containing advertisements,
you will not see any advertisements when navigating the page after making
this temporary customization.

If you are not happy with how a customization is working, you can open the
Flexible Web wizard to undo the last customization you made. When you return
to the page, you can choose a different element or the same one, then
reactivate the Flexible Web wizard to retry the customization again perhaps
with different criteria. For example, in the case of hiding those
advertisement frames mentioned earlier, you probably want to hide all of
them, not just the first one on the page. The wizard will provide you with
choices about whether to hide just the first one or all of them.

You can create as many customizations for a page as you want. Once you have
created one or more customizations, you can save them as a rule, which is
applied every time you load the particular page or site. To indicate that a
rule has been applied to a page, JAWS plays a sound after the page loads.
Rules can be applied to the current Web page, entire Web site, or globally
for all Web sites. Otherwise, customizations are only temporary and are lost
as soon as you navigate away from the current Web page or close the browser.
If you have made temporary customizations and you attempt to navigate to
another page or close the browser, a dialog box opens asking if you want to
save your customizations as a rule.

Creating Customizations and Rules
Following is an example of a situation where you might use Flexible Web to
improve the reading experience on a Web page.

You frequently visit a news Web site where you would like to have JAWS start
reading at the beginning of the article, which is the first level one
heading on the page. Between the heading and the beginning of the text is an
annoying frame called Social containing links to various social Web sites
that you do not want to hear or read. You would first create two temporary
customizations that start reading at the first level 1 heading and hide all
frames named Social. You would then save these as a rule which will be
applied each time you load a page from this Web site.

Creating Temporary Customizations
To customize this site so JAWS starts reading at the first level one heading
and ignores the Social frame, do the following:

Move the Virtual PC Cursor to the first level one heading which contains the
title of the article and press INSERT+SPACEBAR, X to open the Flexible Web
wizard. By default, the Create new customization radio button is selected. 
Choose Next and you are prompted with the type of customization you want to
create. Select Start reading at an element, then choose Next. 
You are now asked what element you want to customize. The first item in the
list is the level one heading containing the article title. Since this is
the element where you want JAWS to start reading, choose Next. 
In the list box, select a customization. In this case, select the option
Start reading at heading 1, 1 from the top. This is because you want this
customization to work for every article on the site, not just the current
one. 
Choose Finish and you are returned to the page. 
Move the Virtual PC Cursor to the frame called Social and press
INSERT+SPACEBAR, X to open the Flexible Web wizard again. Since a
customization has already been created, there are now several radio buttons
that have become available, including Retry, Undo, and Save temporary
customizations as a rule. However, the default radio button is still Create
a new customization, so choose Next. 
Select Hide an element, then choose Next. 
>From the list of elements you can customize, choose the Social frame, then
choose Next. 
In the list of possible choices for how to hide the selected element, select
Hide all frames named Social. This hides all frames with the name Social no
matter where they appear on the page. 
Choose Finish to return to the page. As you navigate the page, the virtual
buffer will no longer show the Social frame between the title of the article
and its text. 
Note: Customizations only apply for the current browser window or tab. This
allows you to have the same page open in two browser windows at the same
time so you can try customizations on one page, while leaving the other one
unchanged.

Retrying a Customization
If you are not completely satisfied with how a customization is working, you
can undo the customization and try creating it again. For instance, you may
have created the customization using the wrong element.

To retry a customization, do the following:

Move the Virtual PC cursor to the element on the page you want to customize
and press INSERT+SPACEBAR, X to open the Flexible Web wizard. 
Select the Retry radio button and choose Next. 
The most recent customization you made is deleted. Follow the steps in the
wizard to create a new customization. 
If you want to delete the last customization you made without creating a new
one, press INSERT+SPACEBAR, X to open the Flexible Web wizard and choose the
Undo radio button. Select Finish to remove the customization and return to
the Web page.

Saving One or More Temporary Customizations as a Rule Currently,the
customizations you made in this example are temporary. To save them as a
permenant rule, do the following:

Press INSERT+SPACEBAR, X to open the Flexible Web wizard. Select the Save
temporary customizations as a rule radio button, then choose Next. 
In the Rule name edit field, enter a name for the rule, for example, "News
Article Web Site". 
Press TAB to move to the checkable list of customizations that will be
included in the rule. By default, all customizations are selected. You can
exclude a customization from the rule by pressing the SPACEBAR to clear its
check mark. 
Press TAB to move to the How would you like this rule to apply combo box.
The available choices are Globally, To the current site, or To the current
page. The default option is To the current site. If you want to apply the
rule to the current page (such as the home page of a site), or globally, so
it applies to all sites, move up or down through the combo box to select the
option you want. In our example, we will choose the default so that the rule
is applied to any page within the current site. 
Choose Finish to create the new rule. 
Now, when ever you visit any page on this site, JAWS will begin reading at
the first level 1 heading and all frames named Social will not appear in the
virtual view.

Rules are browser specific. This means that if you save rules for a page in
Internet Explorer then access the same page in Firefox, the rules you
created will not work. You will need to create the rule again in Firefox.

Managing Rules
You can manage rules by opening the Flexible Web wizard and choosing View
and change where rules apply. In the dialog box that opens, you can rename,
delete, enable,disable, or move existing rules from one page or site to
another without having to re-create the entire rule.

The Flexible Web viewer dialog box contains a tree view and a checkable list
view. The tree view lists the sites and pages for which you have saved
Flexible Web rules. The top level is Global, level one is Current site, and
level two is Current page. The list view shows all rules. Every rule has a
check mark next to it. If a rule is supposed to be executed for a current
location in the tree view, the rule is checked, otherwise it is unchecked.

For example, let's say that you have created three different rules: "Rule A"
to be applied globally for all sites, "Rule B" for google.com, and "Rule C"
for a specific page on cnn.com. If Global is selected in the tree, you will
find that only "Rule A" will be checked in the list of rules, which means
that no matter how many saved rules there are, only "Rule A" will run on
every single page.

If the currently selected item in the tree is google.com, then both "Rule A"
and "Rule B" will be checked. "Rule A" is checked for google.com because it
is supposed to run on all sites and "Rule B" is checked, because it was
saved specifically for google.com. "Rule C" is not checked because it was
saved for one of the pages on cnn.com and therefore does not apply to
google.com.

>From the list of rules, you can enable or disable rules as well as delete,
rename, or view properties of the selected rule.

Enabling or Disabling a Rule
To enable or disable a rule for a site or page, do the following:

>From the browser where you have created Flexible Web rules, press
INSERT+SPACEBAR, X to open the Flexible Web wizard. 
Choose the View and change where rules apply radio button. 
Move to the Finish button and press ENTER. This closes the wizard and opens
a viewer that contains a treeview. Its root is Global, its level 1 branch is
Current site, and its level 2 branch is Current page. The default location
when the Viewer opens is Global. 
Navigate the tree, opening the Current Site or Current page branch as
desired. Each branch will include the name of the site or page of a site. 
>From the desired site or page whose rules you want to examine, press TAB to
move to the next control. This is a checkable list view of rules. If the
currently selected rule is being applied to the current page or site, it
will be checked. Otherwise, any rules that appear in the list will be
unchecked. 
If the rule is currently checked - that is, it is applied to the current
page, site, or globally, and you just want to disable it without deleting
it, then uncheck the rule by pressing SPACEBAR. Otherwise, if the rule is
unchecked - that is, it is not applied to the current page or site, but you
do wish to apply it, then check it by pressing SPACEBAR. 
When you are finished, press TAB to move to the Close button and press
ENTER. 
Deleting a Rule
To delete a rule, do the following:

>From the browser where you have created Flexible Web rules, press
INSERT+SPACEBAR, X to open the Flexible Web wizard. 
Choose the View and change where rules apply radio button and press ENTER. 
When the Flexible Web viewer opens, press TAB to move to the list of rules. 
Navigate to the rule you want to delete and press the DELETE Key.
Alternatively, press the APPLICATIONS Key to open the context menu and
choose Delete. When asked if you want to continue, choose Yes to delete the
rule, or No to cancel the deletion. 
Caution: If you choose Yes, the rule will be deleted and you will have to
recreate it in order to use it again. This also means that if there were
multiple sites or pages that were using this rule, they will no longer run
it as well. If you need to temporarily stop a rule from being applied for a
specific page or site, simply clear its check mark instead of deleting it.
You can then select it again when you need it.

When you are finished, press TAB to move to the Close button and press
ENTER. 
Renaming a Rule
To rename a rule, do the following:

>From the browser where you have created Flexible Web rules, press
INSERT+SPACEBAR, X to open the Flexible Web wizard. 
Choose the View and change where rules apply radio button and press ENTER. 
When the Flexible Web viewer opens, press TAB to move to the list of rules. 
Navigate to the rule you want to rename and press F2 to rename the rule.
Alternatively, you can press the APPLICATIONS Key to open the context menu
and choose Rename. This opens a dialog box where you can edit the name of
the rule similar to renaming a file in Windows Explorer. 
Edit the rule name then press ENTER to confirm the change or ESC to cancel. 
When you are finished, press TAB to move to the Close button and press
ENTER. 
Viewing the Customizations in a Rule
To view the list of customizations that are included in a rule, do the
following:

>From the browser where you have created Flexible Web rules, press
INSERT+SPACEBAR, X to open the Flexible Web wizard. 
Choose the View and change where rules apply radio button and press ENTER. 
When the Flexible Web viewer opens, press TAB to move to the list of rules. 
Navigate to the rule you want to view, then press the APPLICATIONS Key to
open the context menu and choose Properties. 
When the Properties dialog box opens, you are on a read-only control that
shows the name of the current rule whose settings you wish to examine. For
example, you may have set several temporary customizations as a single rule.
Therefore, the properties for the rule will include the various
customizations made for that rule. Press TAB to move to the properties list
and use the ARROW keys to navigate the list of properties associated with
the rule. 
When you are done examining the properties of the current rule, press TAB to
move to the Close button and press ENTER to return to the viewer. Select the
Close button once more to exit the viewer and return to the browser. 
Using Other JAWS Features on a Web Page Where Flexible Web Rules are Applied
Where applicable, other JAWS features such as PlaceMarkers, Custom Page
Summary, and Personalized Settings will continue to be in effect for a page
where Flexible Web rules have been applied to it. This depends on whether a
setting applied as a Flexible Web rule conflicts with a setting that is not
a Flexible Web rule. For example, if you have created a PlaceMarker for a
page that is located on an element that has now been hidden because a
Flexible Web rule has been applied to that page, the PlaceMarker will not be
found when you attempt to move to it.

For pages that automatically update information frequently, any Flexible Web
rules applied will still be in effect as the page updates. Additionally, if
a page automatically sets focus to a control, such as an edit field for
searching, this takes precedence over any rules that start reading at a
specific element.

When selecting and copying text from a Web page where Flexible Web rules
have been applied, if Select and Copy Full Content Using Onscreen Highlight
is selected in Quick Settings, all content is copied, including any hidden
content that was included in the selection. If you do not want to include
any hidden content when selecting, choose the Select and Copy from Virtual
Cursor option.

Turning Off Flexible Web
Flexible Web is on by default. To turn it off so rules are not applied when
pages load, do the following:

Press INSERT+F2, and select Settings Center. 
Press CTRL+SHIFT+D to load the JAWS default settings. 
In the Search edit box, type "Flexible Web" without the quotes. 
Press DOWN ARROW to move to Flexible Web in the filtered search results in
the tree view. 
Next, press SPACEBAR to enable or disable Flexible Web. 


-----Original Message-----
From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:jaws-users-list-boun...@jaws-users.com] On
Behalf Of simon
Sent: 29. juli 2014 10:49
To: jaws-users-list@jaws-users.com
Subject: [JAWS-Users] i e question

Hi I have a few questions, how do I stop I e from loading the page I was on
previously? and where do I find this flexible web?
For answers to frequently asked questions about this list visit:
http://www.jaws-users.com/help/

For answers to frequently asked questions about this list visit:
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