Re: Other accessible terminal emulation

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Howdy,

Also, previous messages in this thread would suggest it works just as
well in a Terminal Emulator as from the terminal itse
yea exactly. Fenrir provides "drivers" to provide different backends (speech, braille (WIP), input, sound, remote and screen)
currently i implement 2 different screen drivers.
1. vcsaDriver: uses /dev/vcsa[1-x] as information source to provide information on the screen. this just works for real TTY terminal with an existing VCSA device 2. ptyDriver: uses pty, fork, and pyte to stand as "man in the middle" (like yasr did but in a lot more advanced state). so it spawns an terminal and  captures any input you did and watches to the output of its child process, processing it and pass it through. i suggest to use XTERM or another inaccessible terminal emulator to my users, because they don't conflict with orca at all (input (shortcuts) and output).

built-in support for Unicode(arguably of limited use for
fenrir provides Unicode support as well for any language form just the beginning (on VCSA and PTY).

No idea why Fenrir is named after the Wolf from Norse mythology,
hehe because i m a rebel ;). Just kidding. the naming was strom_dragons idea ;).

sadly i m not a good software deployer, so i just provide packages for ArchLinux (since i use it). I also see some debian packages ( i never tested or tried them, currenlty). But fenrir runs also without any installation just from git, (the dependencies are needed of course). so if anyone is good in deploying software for different distros with setup.py or similar, just tell me :).

cheers chrys

Am 19.11.18 um 18:30 schrieb Linux for blind general discussion:
Fenrir is a text-mode, userspace screen reader written in Python. I
haven't used it myself, but its gaining popularity as an alternative
to espeakup. The two biggest pros I've heard is that, as a user space
application, it doesn't require a kernel module(espeakup requires the
speakup kernel module) and should thus be easier to setup on distros
that don't ship staging modules in their default kernels(speakup has
been trapped in staging for years and has little chance of graduating
to kernel main short of a complete rewrite as I understand it) and
built-in support for Unicode(arguably of limited use for
English-speaking users, but could be vital to those whose native
language uses a non-Latin Alphabet).

Also, previous messages in this thread would suggest it works just as
well in a Terminal Emulator as from the terminal itself, which I don't
believe I've heard suggest of espeakup or SBL, the latter which I use
for terminal speech myself(I only run X for Firefox, so I can't
comment on the question of Terminal Emulators).

No idea why Fenrir is named after the Wolf from Norse mythology,
especially since its traditional to name screen readers after marine
animals and this is the only screen reader I know of with a non-marine
animal-based name.

On 11/19/18, Linux for blind general discussion <blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
What is fenrir?

On 11/19/18, Linux for blind general discussion <blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Howdy,

gnome-terminal works as well.

you also can use fenrir to make an terminal emulator accessible by
starting it with:
fenrir -e (for using escape sequence shortcuts)
sudo fenrir -E (using evdev, can only run once)

cheers chrys
Zitat von Linux for blind general discussion <blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx>:

Is there any other accessible terminal emulators besides using mate
terminal in a window manager?

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