[accessibility-guide] Add information on using Mousetweaks

Ben Cotton bcotton at fedoraproject.org
Sat Apr 11 02:26:34 UTC 2015


commit 8838e6991bacc9666aaf5fcf42eeb05ca3a1f20e
Author: Ben Cotton <bcotton at funnelfiasco.com>
Date:   Fri Apr 10 22:03:41 2015 -0400

    Add information on using Mousetweaks

 en-US/Mouse_Tools.xml |   29 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++---
 1 files changed, 26 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/en-US/Mouse_Tools.xml b/en-US/Mouse_Tools.xml
index 467336f..a482263 100644
--- a/en-US/Mouse_Tools.xml
+++ b/en-US/Mouse_Tools.xml
@@ -6,10 +6,10 @@
 		<para>Mouse tools allow the mouse to be used in different ways, and provide an alternate solution to people with limited mobility.</para>
 	<section>
 		<title>KMouseTool</title>
-			<para>A program for KDE, <application>KMouseTool,</application> provides an alternate method for clicking the mouse by clicking the mouse whenever the cursor pauses and even provides a dragging capability.  <application>KMouseTool</application> works with any mouse or pointing device.</para>
+			<para>A program for KDE, <application>KMouseTool</application>, provides an alternate method for clicking the mouse by clicking the mouse whenever the cursor pauses and even provides a dragging capability.  <application>KMouseTool</application> works with any mouse or pointing device.</para>
 		<section>
 			<title>Installing KMouseTool</title>
-				<para>In Fedora, <application>KMouseTool</application> is packaged in the <package>kdeaccessibility</package> package.  This package also contains kmagnifier, kmouth, and ktts, all of which are discussed in other areas of this guide.  To install <package>kdeaccessibility</package> you can either select  <menuchoice><guilabel>System &gt; Administration &gt; Add/Remove Software</guilabel></menuchoice> and then type in <package>kdeaccessibility</package> in the screen that pops up, or in a terminal window type su -c "yum install kdeaccessibility".</para>
+				<para>In Fedora, <application>KMouseTool</application> is packaged in the <package>kdeaccessibility</package> package.  This package also contains <package>kmagnifier</package>, <package>kmouth</package>, and <package>ktts</package>, all of which are discussed in other areas of this guide.  To install <package>kdeaccessibility</package> you can either select  <menuchoice><guimenu>System</guimenu><guisubmenu>Administration</guisubmenu><guimenuitem>Add/Remove Software</guimenuitem></guilabel></menuchoice> and then type in <package>kdeaccessibility</package> in the screen that pops up, or in a terminal window type <command>su -c "dnf install kdeaccessibility"</command>.</para>
 		</section>
 	</section>
 	<section>
@@ -17,7 +17,30 @@
 		 	<para>Similar to KDE's <application>KMouseTool</application>, GNOME's <application>Mousetweaks</application> provides functions for simulated secondary clicks, dwell clicks, and pointer capture.  Additional information on <application>Mousetweaks</application> can be found at <ulink url="http://library.gnome.org/users/mousetweaks/"></ulink></para>
 		<section>
 			<title>Installing Mousetweaks</title>
-				<para>In Fedora, <application>Mousetweaks</application> is packaged and can be installed by selecting <menuchoice><guilabel>System &gt; Administration &gt; Add/Remove Software</guilabel></menuchoice> and then typing <package>Mousetweaks</package>; or in a terminal window, type su -c "yum install mousetweaks".</para>
+				<para>In Fedora, <application>Mousetweaks</application> is packaged and can be installed by selecting <menuchoice><guimenu>System</guimenu><guisubmenu>Administration</guisubmenu><guimenuitem>Add/Remove Software</guimenuitem></guilabel></menuchoice> and then typing <package>Mousetweaks</package>; or in a terminal window, type <command>su -c "dnf install mousetweaks"</command>.</para>
+		</section>
+		<section>
+			<title>Using Mousetweaks</title>
+			<para>Mousetweaks is installed by default in the Fedora
+			Workstation image. To activate the mouse tools, open the
+			top bar by pressing and holding <keycombo>
+			<keycap>Control</keycap><keycap>Alt</keycap>
+			<keycap>Tab</keycap></keycombo>, and pressing the
+			<keycap>Tab</keycap> key until you hear "top bar".
+			Release the keys. Press <keycap>Tab</keycap> until you
+			land on the <guilabel>Accessibility</guilabel> menu.
+			Press the <keycap>down arrow</keycap> to expand and
+			enter this menu. Press the <keycap>down arrow</keycap>
+			key until you land on <guilabel>Mouse Keys</guilabel>.
+			Press <keycap>enter</keycap> to activate. From now on,
+			you can operate your mouse by the numpad on your
+			keyboard. Keys <keycap>4</keycap> and <keycap>6</keycap>
+			move the mouse left and right, <keycap>2</keycap> and
+			<keycap>8</keycap> move up and down, and <keycap>5</keycap>
+			 clicks. You can change various options by accessing the 
+			<guilabel>Universal access</guilabel> dialog in GNOME's
+			settings and pressing <keycap>enter</keycap> on the
+			<guilabel>Mouse Keys</guilabel> option.</para>
 		</section>
 	</section>
 </section>


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