Moderated letters getting capitalized
On Sun, Nov 13, 2022 at 05:38 AM, Udo Egner-Walter wrote:
I don't know if he is, but one reason to use capslock could be that a person is one-handed.- If this is the case, a far better option would be Windows own built-in Sticky Keys option that allows modifier keys to be pressed and released but act as though they are still pressed until the next key is entered. Thus, hitting Shift makes shift stay until you press a letter that follows it to get a capital letter. https://geekflare.com/using-sticky-keys-in-windows/ -- Brian - Virginia, USA - Windows 10, 64-Bit, Version 22H2, Build 19045 If you cannot or will not imagine the results of your actions, there’s no way you can act morally or responsibly. Little kids can’t do it; babies are morally monsters — completely greedy. Their imagination has to be trained into foresight and empathy. ~ Ursula LeGuin, 2005 Interview in The Guardian |
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Udo Egner-Walter
Gene wrote:
Why don't you just use the shift key if all you want to do is capitalize one letter?I don't know if he is, but one reason to use capslock could be that a person is one-handed. Udo |
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Gene Warner
Why don't you just use the shift key if all you want to do is capitalize one letter?
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Gene... On 11/10/2022 1:25 AM, Rahul Bajaj wrote:
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Adrian Spratt
Rahul,
As others have suggested, it’s best to use the all caps command only when you want to capitalize an entire word or phrase. However, even when I use the shift to capitalize an initial letter, the next letter sometimes also gets capitalized. The reason? I’m typing too fast. Usually, spellchecker will detect the error, but I now know either to slow down or look for words where I often make the mistake. Most frequent? the word “in.” If I capitalize the “I,” often as not the “n” will be also.
-- My novel Caroline is now available in paperback, Kindle and audiobook versions and, for qualified readers in the US, at the National Library Service/BARD. Go to: https://adrianspratt.com/book/
From: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> On Behalf Of
Rahul Bajaj
Sent: Thursday, November 10, 2022 1:25 AM To: main <main@jfw.groups.io> Subject: letters getting capitalized
Hi,
I use JAWS 2022, MS Surface GoTo, Win 11. The problem I am facing is this. Many times, some letters that come immediately after a letter that I want to capitalize also get capitalized, wrongly.
E.g. Let's say I want to write John. I press the insert key twice to capitalize J and then press it again twice to turn caps lock off. But O also gets capitalized. Why could this be happening, and what can I do to fix it?
Rahul
-- -- Senior Associate Fellow, Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy Co-Founder, Mission Accessibility Special Correspondent on the rights of persons with disabilities, Oxford Human Rights Hub Coordinator of the working group on accessibility, e-Committee, Supreme Court of India
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Dave Durber
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Rhul:
Instead of using the CAPS LOCK KEY to capitalize one letter, use the SHIFT key. In
the case of your example, press and hold down the left SHIFT key, then press the
letter J, release the SHIFT key then, type o h n, which will appear in lower
case. You do this for all pronouns and for the first letter of a sentence and
paragraph.
Dave
----- Original Message -----
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Howard Traxler
Why would one use the caps lock to capitalize one letter? Simply
use the shift key. That's mainly what it's for. On 11/10/2022 12:25 AM, Rahul Bajaj
wrote:
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Rahul Bajaj
Hi, I use JAWS 2022, MS Surface GoTo, Win 11. The problem I am facing is this. Many times, some letters that come immediately after a letter that I want to capitalize also get capitalized, wrongly. E.g. Let's say I want to write John. I press the insert key twice to capitalize J and then press it again twice to turn caps lock off. But O also gets capitalized. Why could this be happening, and what can I do to fix it? Rahul -- Rahul Bajaj Attorney, Ira Law Senior Associate Fellow, Vidhi Centre for Legal Policy Rhodes Scholar (India and Linacre 2018), University of Oxford Co-Founder, Mission Accessibility Special Correspondent on the rights of persons with disabilities, Oxford Human Rights Hub Coordinator of the working group on accessibility, e-Committee, Supreme Court of India |
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