Windows PowerShell command on Get-command orca
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Manual Pages for UNIX Operating System command usage for man orca

User Commands orca(1)

NAME

orca - a screen reader / magnifier

SYNOPSIS

orca [--gui-setup] [--text-setup] [--no-setup] [--

disable=options] [--enable=options] [--user-prefs-dir] [--

help] [--version] [--quit]

DESCRIPTION

orca is a screen reader for people with visual impairments,

and provides alternative access to the desktop by making use of speech synthesis, braille, and magnification support on the platform.

In addition, orca only provides access to

applications/toolkits that support the assistive technology

service provide interface (AT-SPI), which include GTK,

Mozilla, Firefox, Evolution, OpenOffice, StarOffice,

Java/Swing, etc. OPTIONS The following options are supported:

-s, --gui-setup, --setup

When starting orca bring up the GUI configuration dia-

log.

-t, --text-setup

When starting orca initiate the text-based configura-

tion.

-n, --no-setup

When starting orca force the application to be started

without configuration, even though it might have needed

it. This is useful when starting orca via something like

gdm.

-u, --user-prefs-dir=directory

When starting orca, specify the directory as an alter-

nate directory for the user preferences.

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User Commands orca(1)

-e, --enable=speech|braille-monitor|magnifier|main-window

When starting orca, force the enabling of the supplied

options.

-d, --disable=speech|braille-monitor|magnifier|main-window

When starting orca, force the disabling of the supplied

options.

-?, -h, --help

Show the help message of this release of the orca pro-

gram.

-v, --version

Return the orca version number.

-q, --quit

Quit orca.

EXTENDED DESCRIPTION

In order for the "Accessible GNOME Desktop" to be accessible to users who are blind or have low vision, users will need to employ an assistive technology (AT) that exposes the

graphical desktop information encoded in the GNOME Accessi-

bility Framework. Customers with blind employees/students need to have the ability to adapt and customize their assistive technology

solutions - both to improve the efficiency of their blind

users (to help make up for disadvantages inherent in not being able to "see" the entire screen immediately at a glace), and also to "work around" poorly designed and not particularly accessible applications that their blind users need to use.

orca is an extensible assistive technology that provides

end-user access to applications and toolkits that support

the GNOME Accessibility Framework. It has been designed with

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User Commands orca(1)

direct continual feedback from its disability user commun-

ity.

orca uses a "scripting" approach to easily allow customiza-

tion per application and provides the ability for each user to further customize their AT environment based on their own

preferences. The "scripting" approach of orca provides a

much more adaptable and compelling assistive technology solution than existing AT for the JDS desktop.

Functionally orca does 4 major things:

1. Present information to the user via speech synthesis

(text-to-speech), or refreshable braille (hardware con-

nected to serial or USB port), or a magnified image on the user's display. 2. Acquire information from the applications and desktop graphical display via the GNOME Accessibility Framework. 3. Track events occurring in the applications and desktop graphical display via the GNOME Accessibility Framework. 4. Intercept and optionally consume user input events from the system keyboard and the buttons on a refreshable

braille display. Based on the input, orca will either

pass the event on to the application for normal process-

ing, execute orca-specific commands (such as reading the

next line in the display or panning the braille display), or perform operations on application objects (such as clicking buttons or modifying text areas).

orca will also:

+o be a collection of building blocks that comprise screen reading and magnification technology, including use of

text-to-speech, braille input/output, magnification

logic, screen reading logic, keyboard and mouse inter-

ception modules, and event coalescing. +o be developed with the standard GNOME build environment. +o support multiple braille displays.

+o support the gnome-speech module for text-to-speech.

+o intercept keyboard & mouse events through the GNOME Accessibility Framework and other supported X

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User Commands orca(1)

mechanisms.

+o support the gnome-mag module to provide end-user mag-

nification of the screen between 2 and 16 times magnif-

ication in integer increments. +o render its own graphical user interface using GTK+ widgets. +o provide a scripting mechanism, giving it the ability to customize how each application on the JDS desktop is

handled by orca.

+o provide further customization on a per-user basis.

orca provides a set of its own keyboard commands. Note that

you can always enter orca's "learn mode" while running orca

by pressing Insert+F1. When in learn mode, orca will inter-

cept all keyboard and braille input events and will tell you what the effect of them would be. To exit learn mode, press the escape key. +o Commands for adjusting speech parameters

- Insert-right arrow

increase speech rate

- Insert-left arrow

decrease speech rate

- Insert-up arrow

raise the pitch

- Insert-down arrow

decrease the pitch +o Flat review commands

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User Commands orca(1)

- Numpad-7 move the flat review cursor to the pre-

vious line, and read it.

- Numpad-8 read the current line.

- Numpad-9 move the flat review cursor to the next

line, and read it.

- Numpad-4 move the flat review cursor to the pre-

vious word, and read it.

- Numpad-5 read the current word.

- Numpad-6 move the flat review cursor to the next

word, and read it.

- Numpad-1 move the flat review cursor to the pre-

vious character, and read it.

- Numpad-2 read the current character.

- Numpad-3 move the flat review cursor to the next

character, and read it.

- Numpad-slash perform a left mouse click at the loca-

tion of the flat review cursor.

- Numpad-star perform a right mouse click at the

location of the flat review cursor.

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Note: the above commands apply when working with objects as well as when working with text. For example, if the flat review cursor were positioned on a menu bar, pressing the

read current line command would speak the names of all visi-

ble menus. Similarly, pressing read next word would speak the object to the right of the flat review cursor on the same line, or move flat review to the next line if no more objects were found. +o Miscellaneous functions

- Insert-F1

enter learn mode (press escape to exit)

- Insert-f

speak font and attribute information for the current character.

- Insert-space

launch the orca Configuration dialog.

- Insert-Control-space

reload user settings and reinitialize services as necessary.

- Insert-s

toggle speech on and off

- Insert-F11

toggle the reading of tables, either by single cell, or whole row.

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User Commands orca(1)

-Insert-q

quit orca.

+o Commands for debugging

- Insert-F3 report information on the currently

active script.

- Insert-F4 cycle through orca's various debug lev-

els.

- Insert-F5 prints a debug listing of all known

applications to the console where orca

is running.

- Insert-F7 prints debug information about the

ancestry of the object with focus.

- Insert-F8 prints debug information about the

application with focus. Note, in order for the last three commands to be of use,

orca needs to be started from a virtual console or via

gnome-terminal. Output is sent to the console only (i.e., it

is not sent to speech or braille). EXIT STATUS The following exit values are returned: 0 Application exited successfully 1 Application exited with error

2 orca cannot parse its command line options.

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User Commands orca(1)

FILES The following files are used by this application:

/usr/bin/orca orca executable

~/.orca/user-settings.py user's personal configura-

tion settings for orca

ATTRIBUTES

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attri-

butes:

____________________________________________________________

| ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE |

|_____________________________|_____________________________|

| Availability | gnome/accessibility/orca |

|_____________________________|_____________________________|

| Interface stability | Volatile |

|_____________________________|_____________________________|

SEE ALSO

attributes(5)

orca online reference manual.

Latest version of the GNOME Accessibility Guide for your platform. Latest version of the GNOME Desktop User Guide for your platform.5 NOTES Written by Rich Burridge, Sun Microsystems Inc., 2006, 2007.

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