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Code Editor : README
Orca v3.6.3 Introduction ======================================================================== Orca is a free, open source, flexible, and extensible screen reader that provides access to the graphical desktop via user-customizable combinations of speech, braille, and/or magnification. Orca works with applications and toolkits that support the assistive technology service provider interface (AT-SPI), which is the primary assistive technology infrastructure for the Solaris and Linux operating environments. Applications and toolkits supporting the AT-SPI include the GNOME GTK+ toolkit, the Java platform's Swing toolkit, OpenOffice/LibreOffice, Gecko, and WebKitGtk. AT-SPI support for the KDE Qt toolkit is currently being pursued. See also http://live.gnome.org/Orca for detailed English and Spanish information on Orca, including how to run Orca, how to communicate with the Orca user community, and where to log bugs and feature requests. Dependencies ======================================================================== Orca v3.6.x is supported on GNOME 3.6.x only. We highly suggest you use the latest releases of GNOME because they contain accessibility infrastructure and application bug fixes that help Orca work better. Orca also has the following dependencies: * Python - Python platform (minimum version 2.7) * pygobject-3.0 - Python bindings for the GObject library * gtk+-3.0 - Gtk+ toolkit * json-py - a JSON (http://json.org) reader and writer in Python * python-speechd - Python bindings for Speech Dispatcher (optional) * BrlTTY - BrlTTY support for braille (optional) * BrlAPI - BrlAPI support for braille (optional) * py-setproctitle - Python library to set the process title (optional) YOU ALSO NEED THE LATEST AT-SPI AND ATK FOR THE GNOME 3.5.x DEVELOPMENT RELEASES. THEY CONTAIN VERY IMPORTANT BUG FIXES! NOTE: If you have multiple versions of the python interpreter installed on your machine, you should set the PYTHON environment variable when configuring Orca. For example: PYTHON=/usr/bin/python2.7 ./autogen.sh or PYTHON=/usr/bin/python2.7 ./configure NOTE FOR BRLTTY USERS: ======================================================================== Orca depends upon the Python bindings for BrlAPI available in BrlTTY v3.8 or better. You can determine if the Python bindings for BrlAPI are installed by running the following command: python -c "import brlapi" If you get the following error, the Python bindings for BrlAPI are not installed. This is most likely because whoever built BrlTTY did not have Pyrex installed before building BrlTTY: Traceback (most recent call last): File "<string>", line 1, in <module> ImportError: No module named brlapi If you run into this, install python-pyrex and rebuild/reinstall BrlTTY. See also http://live.gnome.org/Orca/Braille for more information on BrlTTY and also using liblouis for contracted braille. Running Orca ======================================================================== When you run Orca for the first time, you will be prompted for your initial user preferences. The first time you run Orca, you also need to log out and log back in in order for accessibility to be enabled in your environment. If you wish to modify your Orca preferences in the future, you can press "Insert+space" while Orca is running, or you can re-run orca with the "--setup" command line option. You can bypass the Orca setup utility by running orca with the "--no-setup" option. This is useful for running from environments such as the login screen. To get help while running Orca, press "Insert+F1". This will enable "learn mode", which provides a spoken and brailled description of what various keyboard and braille input device actions will do. To exit learn mode, press "Escape." Finally, the preferences dialog contains a "Key Bindings" tab that lists the keyboard binding for Orca. To quit Orca, you can press "Insert+q" or run "orca --quit" from the command line. For more information, see the Orca documentation which is available within Orca as well as at: http://library.gnome.org/users/orca/stable Scripting Orca ======================================================================== So, you want to write a script for Orca? The best thing to do is start by looking at other scripts under the src/orca/scripts/ hierarchy of the source tree. Also, the docs/doc-set/internals.html file contains detailed information about the internal workings of Orca.
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