Csound Csound-dev Csound-tekno Search About

Re: [Csnd] Accessible Csound for the Blind

Date2012-10-12 00:14
Frompj@pjb.com.au
SubjectRe: [Csnd] Accessible Csound for the Blind
Greetings Marco,

Marco wrote:
> I am blind person.
> I try using Csound in command line and It works good.
> But, to write a files for Csound, what text editor You should to me?
> Csoundqt isn't accessible for the blind.
> I only using a screen reader and keyboard.

Do you use linux? Which screen reader do you use?

Justin wrote:
> Any text editor will work.
> Emacs has its own accessibility features (emacspeak)
> and also the csoundx extension for csound,
> but emacs is almost as much a lifestyle as an editor

emacspeak is very good, if you can learn emacs.
I think the other good choice is edbrowse
  http://the-brannons.com/edbrowse/usersguide.html
  http://www.pjb.com.au/blin/edbrowse_summary.html
which is a line-editor, like a much-upgraded version of ed.

I think: if you have used emacs, adopt emacspeak;
if you have used vi, or ed, or even edlin, adopt edbrowse.

(They both also do mail and web-browsing.)

Regards,  Peter Billam

http://www.pjb.com.au      pj@pjb.com.au     (03) 6278 9410
"Follow the charge, not the particle."  --  Richard Feynman
 from The Theory of Positrons, Physical Review, 1949


Date2012-10-12 14:10
FromMarco Oros
SubjectRe: [Csnd] Accessible Csound for the Blind
Dňa 12. 10. 2012 1:14 pj@pjb.com.au wrote / napísal(a):
> Greetings Marco,
>
> Marco wrote:
>> I am blind person.
>> I try using Csound in command line and It works good.
>> But, to write a files for Csound, what text editor You should to me?
>> Csoundqt isn't accessible for the blind.
>> I only using a screen reader and keyboard.
> Do you use linux? Which screen reader do you use?
>
> Justin wrote:
>> Any text editor will work.
>> Emacs has its own accessibility features (emacspeak)
>> and also the csoundx extension for csound,
>> but emacs is almost as much a lifestyle as an editor
> emacspeak is very good, if you can learn emacs.
> I think the other good choice is edbrowse
>    http://the-brannons.com/edbrowse/usersguide.html
>    http://www.pjb.com.au/blin/edbrowse_summary.html
> which is a line-editor, like a much-upgraded version of ed.
>
> I think: if you have used emacs, adopt emacspeak;
> if you have used vi, or ed, or even edlin, adopt edbrowse.
>
> (They both also do mail and web-browsing.)
>
> Regards,  Peter Billam
>
> http://www.pjb.com.au      pj@pjb.com.au     (03) 6278 9410
> "Follow the charge, not the particle."  --  Richard Feynman
>   from The Theory of Positrons, Physical Review, 1949
>
>
>
> Send bugs reports to the Sourceforge bug tracker
>              https://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=81968&atid=564599
> Discussions of bugs and features can be posted here
> To unsubscribe, send email sympa@lists.bath.ac.uk with body "unsubscribe csound"
>
     I using NVDA and system Windows 7.