Tim here. It might depend on your screen-reader, but the two settings that jump to mind are: set arrow_cursor set braille_friendly which keep the cursor closer to the point of action on the screen rather than redrawing menu text or homing the cursor to some corner of the screen. Additionally, it might help to set ascii_chars so that visual trees are made with ASCII characters rather than with the extended line-drawing characters. Additionally, if you're using neomutt (or mutt with the sidebar patch), it might be worth disabling that: unset sidebar_visible since it can be a bit confusing if you're reading top-to-bottom, getting a piece of the sidebar, then a piece of the message list, then the next row's slice of sidebar and slice of message list, etc. If you're already an experienced mutt/neomutt user, you might also unset help set status_format="" which cleans some of the help-text at the top and the status-bar at the bottom. Alternatively, there's a whole host of options for things you might find useful in the status-bar, so I'll leave that up to your taste. Hopefully this helps, -Tim On May 24, 2019, Linux for blind general discussion wrote: > Any advice on what should be in a muttrc file for screen readers > and also what should not be in a muttrc file for screen readers to > work well with mutt? _______________________________________________ Blinux-list mailing list Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list