The one question I have, not being a speakup user myself, is how easy is it to ask it to read the line or word that I'm on. For example, if I use the arrow keys or whatever to read the screen in emacs under speakup and find a place where I want to make a change. My cursor is in the correct place, but I just want to hear some context now. Can I ask speakup to just read the line the cursor is on, or even read the sentence or paragraph which contains the cursor? I believe this is very different, and seems like an easier problem to the one of automatically figuring out and then reading an item after the cursor has been moved. Rich ----- Original Message ----- From: "Kirk Reiser" <kirk@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> To: <speakup at braille.uwo.ca> Sent: Monday, August 20, 2001 10:59 AM Subject: Re: No text editing??? > Let me give a tad of clarification for the new and prospective speakup > users. Speakup allows you to have full editing capabilities, at least > as full as any text based application under gnu/Linux. > > I use emacs with speakup with absolutely no difficulty and am using it > currently to write this note. I do not use emacspeak although I under > stand it is a fine product. > > Now where some folks are complaining about speakups lack is in > automatic cursor speaking. Speakup tracks the cursor perfectly and is > pretty well always where your cursor is. What speakup does not do is > automatically speak the line you are moving to. It does not > automatically say the characters you are moving onto. It does track > the cursor though. There is an experimental mode of cursor speaking > in the cvs version of speakup which in some applications works as well > as any screen review package. In other applications it doesn't work > so well. > > I am only saying these things because it creates a false impression > that somehow speakup is inferior and it just plain isn't. I would be > very happy to have folks help with fixing this situation of automatic > speaking. It is not a trivial problem to do correctly. It is also > not that high on my priority list because I have no problem writing, > coding, reading and editing with it the way it currently works. > > Kirk > > -- > > Kirk Reiser The Computer Braille Facility > e-mail: kirk at braille.uwo.ca University of Western Ontario > phone: (519) 661-3061 > > _______________________________________________ > Speakup mailing list > Speakup at braille.uwo.ca > http://speech.braille.uwo.ca/mailman/listinfo/speakup >