gnome-user-docs r880 - trunk/gnome2-accessibility-guide/C



Author: vpalexander
Date: Mon Jun 16 14:22:54 2008
New Revision: 880
URL: http://svn.gnome.org/viewvc/gnome-user-docs?rev=880&view=rev

Log:
fixed db2html error


Modified:
   trunk/gnome2-accessibility-guide/C/ChangeLog
   trunk/gnome2-accessibility-guide/C/enable.xml

Modified: trunk/gnome2-accessibility-guide/C/enable.xml
==============================================================================
--- trunk/gnome2-accessibility-guide/C/enable.xml	(original)
+++ trunk/gnome2-accessibility-guide/C/enable.xml	Mon Jun 16 14:22:54 2008
@@ -1,33 +1,26 @@
 <chapter id="enabling-accessibility" status="writing">
 <title>Enabling Accessibility Tools</title>
-
 <para>
 Before moving forward, be sure you are familiar with these essential GNOME commands:
 </para>
-
 <para>
 <keycap>Alt + F1</keycap> - display and activate the GNOME Desktop menu bar. This grants access to the <guilabel>Applications</guilabel>, <guilabel>Places</guilabel> and <guilabel>System</guilabel> menu bar items.
-<note>
+</para>
+<para>
 For Solaris systems, this key is <keycap>Ctrl + Esc</keycap> (as with Microsoft Windows).
-</note>
 </para>
-
 <para>
 <keycap>Alt-F2</keycap> - summons the <emphasis>Run</emphasis> dialog, where you can issue terminal commands with or without parameters. If a file needs to be passed as one of these parameters, use the <guilabel>Run With File</guilabel> button to easily locate the file needed. This dialog also presents an alternate list of known applications which may be easier to navigate for some than the typical <keycap>Alt-F1</keycap> approach.
 </para>
-
 <para>
 <keycap>Tab</keycap> and <keycap>Shift-Tab</keycap> - move focus within an application between controls; use <keycap>Tab</keycap> to cycle forward through controls and <keycap>Shift-Tab</keycap> to cycle backwards. Controls are any user-interactive element that you can manipulate, such as buttons, drop-down lists, text fields, etc.
 </para>
-
 <para>
 <keycap>Alt-Tab</keycap> and <keycap>Shift-Alt-Tab</keycap> - switches between currently running applications. If you have multiple programs running, use <keycap>Alt-Tab</keycap> to cycle forward through the applications and <keycap>Alt-Shift-Tab</keycap> to cycle backwards.
 </para>
-
 <para>
 <emphasis>Starting Orca and GOK (GNOME Onscreen Keyboard)</emphasis>
 </para>
-
 <para>
 You must enable the assistive technology services before you are able to use many of the accessibility tools available.
 </para>
@@ -64,14 +57,14 @@
 </para>
 </step>
 </procedure>
-
 <para>
 If the Sticky Keys feature is not yet enabled, <application>gok</application> will do so the first time it runs.
 </para>
 
 <para>
-use <keycombo>Alt-F2</keycombo> to bring up the <emphasis>Run</emphasis> dialog, type in <literal>Orca</literal> and press <keycap>Enter</keycap>. The first time <application>Orca</application> is launched you will be asked a few questions:
+Use <keycap>Alt-F2</keycap> to bring up the <emphasis>Run</emphasis> dialog, type in <literal>orca</literal> and press <keycap>Enter</keycap>. The first time <application>Orca</application> is launched you will be asked a few questions:
 </para>
+
 <para>
 First you will be presented with a list of languages to choose from; there are currently about 45 languages supported. Most of this list will scroll off the screen, so you may have to use the terminal's scrollbar to view earlier parts of the list. Type in the number of your language choice (e.g., 7 for American English) and press <keycap>Enter</keycap>.
 </para>
@@ -101,9 +94,12 @@
 </para>
 <para>
 To adjust <application>Orca</application> for your requirements, <keycap>Alt-Tab</keycap> to the <application>Orca</application> main window and press <keycap>Tab</keycap> by itself until <application>Orca</application> announces the <guilabel>Preferences</guilabel> button. Press <keycap>Enter</keycap> and you are presented with the GUI configuration dialog.
-<note>
-If you are using large print fonts, the entire <guilabel>Preferences</guilabel> configuration dialog may not fit on your screen. You may have to temporarily downsize to another theme or adjust your monitor resolution before effectively using the <guilabel>Preferences</guilabel> dialog. [Orca may later employ a fully scrollable window (with both vertical and horizontal scroll bars) or the GNOME Desktop itself may add this windowing feature (perhaps by panelizing all child controls). This particular window behavior is currently developer-dependent.]
-</note>
+</para>
+<para>
+If you are using large print fonts, the entire <guilabel>Preferences</guilabel> configuration dialog may not fit on your screen. You may have to temporarily downsize to another theme or adjust your monitor resolution before effectively using the <guilabel>Preferences</guilabel> dialog.
+</para>
+<para>
+[Orca may later employ a fully scrollable window (with both vertical and horizontal scroll bars) or the GNOME Desktop itself may add this windowing feature (perhaps by panelizing all child controls). This particular window behavior is currently developer-dependent.]
 </para>
 <para>
 The GUI configuration dialog is made up of several sections, each denoted by a notebook tab at the top of the dialog. These tabs can be navigated with the left/right arrow keys when the tabstrip has focus. Press the down arrow or <keycap>Tab</keycap> to move from the tabstrip into the options area for the currently highlighted tab/section. To return to the tabstrip, use <keycap>Shift-Tab</keycap> until the tabstrip is selected again.
@@ -126,7 +122,6 @@
 <para>
 <guilabel>Present tooltips</guilabel> - if enabled, <application>Orca</application> will relay all application tooltips (balloon help messages), regardless of tooltip settings elsewhere. This is a global override option.
 </para>
-
 <para>
 <emphasis>Orca Preferences - Speech Section</emphasis>
 </para>



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