home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
- SECTION 7.0 AUTO KEY
-
- This is the documentation file for Flipper's autokey mode.
-
- CAUTION:
-
- You should be very familiar with the ordinary operation of
- Flipper and your other software before attempting to use AUTOKEY
- mode.
-
- What is AUTOKEY?
-
- AUTOKEY is a special Flipper function which allows it to be
- programmed by keyboard macro programs like NEWKEY. You can
- purchase NEWKEY from:
-
- FAB Software
- P.O. Box 336
- Wayland, MA 01778
-
- for $30. Evaluation disks are also available for $10. Other
- keyboard programs may also be used to program Flipper, but
- NEWKEY is highly recommended because of the niceness of the
- screen presentation for a blind user, and its price. It has
- also been highly recommended in reviews for sighted persons.
-
- Flipper is designed to "steal" control of the keyboard away from
- any other program, only returning control when it is done with
- each keystroke. This makes Flipper compatible with a wide range
- of software which would otherwise not be usable. For example,
- you can always use Flipper to access memory resident software,
- no matter which order it is loaded in. This means that you can
- use Flipper in the ordinary way to access keyboard macro
- programs. However, since Flipper ordinarily only cares about
- what actually is typed at the keyboard, it will ignore whatever
- fake keystrokes are generated by the macro program. AUTOKEY is
- a special review mode which responds to these fake keystrokes.
- Using Flipper in the ordinary way, you can then program macro
- sequences using a separately purchased keyboard macro program,
- and access Flipper within those macros by using the autokey
- mode. This allows you to both program and use macros without
- rebooting, or even leaving your application program. The macros
- you write can control the application program as well as Flipper,
- so you can write powerful macros which combine some action in the
- application program with Flipper reading something.
-
- How to use AUTOKEY:
-
- To make AUTOKEY available, you must put a capital A on the
- command line that starts Flipper in your autoexec file. You
- must load a keyboard macro program (which you have purchased
- separately) before Flipper (putting the command line for the
- macro program before Flipper's in the autoexec file). Repeat,
- the macro program must be loaded before Flipper.
-
- After you have done this and rebooted, Flipper will have one
- additional command at the input level. That command is alt a,
- which starts the autokey mode. Autokey mode is like the review
- mode, with only a few exceptions. You would, in general, only
- use autokey mode when you are programming a macro key sequence,
- and of course, it would be used when the macro is played back.
- Remember, only AUTOKEY is available within a keyboard macro, you
- can not program the quick keys. The quick keys can be used to
- read the screen during macro programming, however, so you can
- tell where you are without messing up the macro. Anything that
- you can do with the quick keys can be done with the AUTOKEY mode,
- and played back in a macro.
-
- What are the differences between AUTOKEY mode and review mode?
-
- AUTOKEY mode must be left by using the escape key. The alt
- space bar can not be programmed into a macro. There is no help
- mode available from within AUTOKEY mode.
-
- What else do I need to know before using AUTOKEY?
-
- AUTOKEY runs in two ways, interactive, and silent. You tell
- Flipper which you want by using the option key alt control
- function key one. When it is in interactive mode, which you
- would normally use to write macros, it tells you all the same
- things that you hear in the review mode, always reading the line
- or word that you are jumping to, for example. If AUTOKEY is
- silent, it only reads what you specifically ask it to, for
- example, it won't tell you to enter a search pattern, or read a
- line that you jump to using the rapid motion commands (shifted
- or preceded by a number). This allows you to write macros in
- which only what you want to be read is read.
-
- Example using AUTOKEY:
-
- Reading a pop up window. If a window is popped up surrounded by
- a box drawn with forms characters, you can write a simple macro
- to read the window. Note that some of the special keys may be
- captured by the keyboard macro program, for example, the control
- left and right square bracets in the case of newkey. You must
- either turn off the macro programs use of the keys, or bypass
- them one at a time. To create the macro, you would:
-
-
- start the macro recording with an alt equals
-
- select the key to be programmed, for example, control w
-
- press return, to give the macro no label
-
- enter autokey with an alt a
-
- jump to the top of the screen with a shift j, then a shift u
-
- start a search pattern with an s.
-
- enter a control left square bracket to search for an upper left corner.
-
- press return to do the search.
-
- press 1 x to mark the upper left corner.
-
- start another search with an s.
-
- enter a control right square bracket to search for a lower right corner.
-
- press return to do the search.
-
- press 2 x to mark the lower right corner
-
- define a block by pressing d, then 5 to use block 5.
-
- reply 1 x for the top row and left side, and 2 x for the
- bottom row and the right side.
-
- read the defined block with an alt 5.
-
- leave the AUTOKEY mode with an escape.
-
- After you have finished, you can read a pop up window with a
- control w.
-
- You can select Flipper options from within an autokey
- sequence, define and read blocks, speak the time of day, and so
- on. You should refer to your keyboard macro program for more
- advanced use of its features, and the steps needed to save your
- macros for later use.
-
- If you want to send something directly to the synthesizer, for
- example to prompt the user or configure it in some special way,
- you can use the quote command. After you press the quote key,
- all subsequent ascii keystrokes are sent directly to the
- synthesizer. Direct output to the synthesizer is ended by any
- non-ascii key, such as the end key.
-
- You can set any of the toggle options to a specific state
- (rather than toggling them), by using a number before the toggle.
- 1 chooses state 1, and 2 chooses state 2.
-
- Another feature of Flipper which is important during Auto Key
- mode is the ability to use c or x in response to a request for a
- row or column number. This allows you to set a block, for
- example, based on where you were after a search.
-
- Note that you can enter a search pattern without immediately
- searching forward for it by using shift s.
-
-
-