Accessibilty tool




















Microsoft is committed to helping close the disability divide and promoting an inclusive workplace culture. Surface products are built to help people be creative, productive, and connected. Surface Adaptive Kit, created in partnership with people with disabilities, makes it easier to adapt, use and navigate your compatible Surface PC and accessories. Ability Summit is a two-day, free digital event experience that brings together people with disabilities, allies, and accessibility professionals to Imagine, Build, Include, and Empower the future of disability inclusion and accessibility.

Start your accessibility journey today by learning how to create experiences that are accessible for people of all abilities.

Helping bridge the Disability Divide We are making a new 5-year commitment to help decrease the gap in education, employment, and access to technology for people with disabilities around the world.

Learn about our commitment Go to the announcement. Microsoft is committed to accessibility There are no limits to what people can achieve when technology reflects the diversity of everyone. Learn about our approach. Accessibility stories Accessible technology facilitates the ability to participate and thrive in today's world.

View our stories. Products and services for everyone. Vision Need a larger screen? A brighter screen? A narrator to read text? Find out about accessibility tools and features for people who are blind, color blind, or have low vision.

Hearing For those who are hard of hearing, have hearing loss, or have deafness, our specialized features can provide solutions including closed captioning, mono sound, and live call transcription. Neurodiversity Innovative tools such as dictation and Windows Hello sign-in can make the digital world more accessible for those who live with dyslexia, seizures, autism, or other cognitive differences.

Learning Our applications for people living with learning disabilities can help increase focus, concentration, and understanding—and include tools to improve reading and writing skills. You can configure Inspect to show you information about all accessibility properties or a subset of those properties. You can also specify other viewing options, such as whether Inspect should remain on top of other user interfaces, or whether Inspect should highlight a bounding rectangle around the selected element.

Once you have configured Inspect to work the way you want, you can begin navigating among UI elements and viewing property information. Inspect saves your configuration settings when it closes and uses them to initialize your next Inspect session. Once you have selected a UI element using Inspect , you can validate that the element exposes the correct Windows Automation navigation for assistive technology products. The Navigation menu options and navigation toolbar buttons change depending on where the selected element is in the tree.

Windows Automation exposes methods that allow assistive technology products to interact with a UI element as if the mouse or keyboard were being used for example, to click a button. The Inspect Action menu lets testers invoke Windows Automation methods on an element for example, Invoke. In UI Automation mode, the other items reflect the control patterns supported by the currently selected UI element. In MSAA mode, the other items always consist of the following:. Many of the menu items can be invoked with a keyboard shortcut even when Inspect is not the active application.

Note however, that the shortcut keys conflict with some applications. Skip to main content. This browser is no longer supported. Download Microsoft Edge More info. Contents Exit focus mode. Please rate your experience Yes No. Any additional feedback? Important Inspect is a legacy tool.

Note The Navigation menu options and navigation toolbar buttons change depending on where the selected element is in the tree. In this article. Presents the control view of the UI Automation tree in the Tree view. Available in UI Automation mode only. Presents the content view of the UI Automation tree in the Tree view. Assumes a screen reader is present. This flag indicates that an application should provide information textually instead of graphically.

You should not assume this flag is set simply because a screen reader is present. Follows the keyboard focus. When selected, an asynchronous focus event hook is installed and moves the caret to the top left of the element with the focus.



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