Re: [orca-list] Vim, is it usable for us?
- From: Rastislav Kish <rastislav kish gmail com>
- To: orca-list gnome org
- Subject: Re: [orca-list] Vim, is it usable for us?
- Date: Thu, 3 Sep 2020 19:25:16 +0200
Hello,
ah, that's interesting. Thanks much for the explanation, I didn't know
it was possible to switch interfaces like this.
I have successfully installed and launched fenrir. The only problems
are, that if I run it as:
sudo fenrir
I don't see output of terminal after launching it, for example when I type:
pwd
I can see the command with Fenrir's review mode, but not the actual output.
If I launch it like:
fenrir -e
here the console works, but not review browsing nor reading lines in
Vim, and as a bonus, Vim switches to a very interesting form, where the
insert mode seems to be the defaultone, and by pressing ctrl+O I can
execute a command but I'm immediately returned to the insert mode again.
however, it doesn't matter much now, as I've managed to get Vim working
with orca. Disabling the ruler did the trick, seems I was entering the
command incorrectly before. I've added the setting to my .vimrc along
with other useful keyboard mappings like remapping up and down arrow
keys to + and - and allowing left and right arrows to jump to next line
after hitting the border of previousone.
It works like a charm now!
The only pitty are the h, j, k and l keys, from what I've read, Vim is
designed to not having to use arrow keys at all, so this could be a
potential slow-down.
I'm currently trying to find a workaround. I already have a quite handy
library to work with speech-dispatcher, so the most easy way seems to be
simply adding a macro on them which will read necessary informations
after the keys are pressed.
I've also got some ideas to at least partially resolve the textual
avareness issues we have to face, so I will probably test them at the
same time.
As for why Vim in a graphical environment, I personally take this as a
kind of... challenge. It's being said, that once one truly masters Vim,
that person will consider any graphical editor very slow. That's of
course for sighted people, I don't know, whether that's also true for
blind folks.
Gonna check it out. :P
Best regards
Rastislav
Dňa 31. 8. 2020 o 23:20 Mewtamer napísal(a):
Okay, most linux systems have a number of consoles, usually named tty1-tty12.
The GUI usually runs on tty1 and switching to tty2, tty3, etc. will
usually give you a text-based login prompt followed by the Linux
console.
On most GUIs, ctrl+alt+a function key will switch to the tty whose
number corresponds to the function key used(e.g. ctrl+alt+f2 will
switch you to tty2) and when in a console not running a GUI, alt+a
function key will do the same.
Some systems will have higher ttys(e.g. tty13-tty24), but I'm not sure
how these are accessed when present.
The general idea for using both graphical and text screen readers in
combination is that You'd have the GUI running in tty1 and would use
Orca with GUI applications in tty1. Meanwhile, the text screen reader
would be running on tty2-tty12 and you would switch to those consoles
for using command line and other text-mode applications with the text
screen reader.
If sound is properly configured, than you should be able to seemlessly
switch back and forth between graphical and text modes by switching
between ttys with the appropriate screen reader reading what you need
it to read on the active tty. And even without the switching between
graphical nd text modes, switching ttys is a powerful tool for
multi-tasking at the command line.
For example, if I'm writing something, I might have Firefox and Orca
running on tty1 incase I need to look something up online, my work
document open in an editor in tty2, tty3 in the same working directory
as tty2 to use wc to keep track of word count on my work document
without having to close or suspend the editor, I might use tty4 to
pull up local files from elsewhere on my machine, and I might have
some time consuming, automated process running in the background on
tty5.
Orca can work with terminal emulators, but I generally find switching
to a tty that isn't running a GUI and using a text screen reader is
often more straight forward for most text-only applications.
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