Apple iPhone OS 3.1 User Manual

Page 186

Advertising
background image

The effect of the rotor depends on what you’re doing. For example, if you’re reading
text in an email you received, you can use the rotor to switch between hearing text
spoken word-by-word or character-by-character when you flick up or down. If you’re
browsing a webpage, use the rotor to choose whether you hear text word-by-word
or character-by-character, hear just the headers, hear just the links (all of them, visited
links, or links not yet visited), hear form elements, or hear descriptions of images. In
other words, you can use the rotor setting to hear all the text, or to jump from one
element to another of a certain type, such as headers or links.

Rotor options depend on the context of what you’re doing.

Reading text

Select and hear text character-by-character

Select and hear text word-by-word

Browsing a webpage

Select and hear text character-by-character

Select and hear text word-by-word

Select and hear headers

Select and hear links

Select and hear form controls

Select and hear visited links

Select and hear links not visited

Select and hear images

Select and hear static text

Zoom in or out

Entering text

Move insertion point and hear text character-by-character

Move insertion point and text word-by-word

Text editing functions

Auto-text

Using a control (such as the spinner for setting the time in Clock)

Select and hear value character-by-character

Select and hear value word-by-word

Adjust the value of the control object

186

Chapter 25

Accessibility

Advertising