moderated Re: Accessible Version of Visual Studio?
Munawar Bijani <munawarb@...>
Hi, I've found VS 2017 to be great in accessibility, mostly because it implements UIA rather than whatever Microsoft was using when VS 2005 was around.
I'd argue that 2017 is the most accessible version yet. I use it at work every day and it works really well with both JAWS and NVDA.
Why does updating Windows "break" things for you? I'd get that
sorted out if I were you; people really shouldn't be using VS 2005
nowadays. Technology is so different from what it used to be and I
strongly recommend staying current, especially with development
tools. Things like the VC++ runtimes are updated with each new
version of Visual Studio as well, and many of these updates patch
security holes that you really don't want floating around.
On 6/17/2019 10:46 AM, Annabelle Susan
Morison wrote:
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