Thanks, Andre. I'll ask about it. Hopefully she won't mind doing that.
Chelsea
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On 9/9/20, Andre Polykanine via groups.io <andre@...> wrote:
Hello again Chelsea,
I might be wrong but it seems, there's no usable way to compare two
Word documents if you're blind.
What you can do however (and it's a more correct way to proceed, I
should say) is to ask your editor or whatever person changing your
document to turn on track changes. That can be done either on the
Review ribbon, in the Tracking submenu, or just by pressing
Ctrl+Shift+E.
Thus, when he or she sends you the document back, you will hear
different revisions in the document. That works great with JAWS, but I
heard NVDA also does work.
--
With best regards,
Andre
Munich, Germany
Skype: menelion_elensule
Twitter (English only): @AndrePolykanine
------------ Original message ------------
From: Chelsea <Lady.arwen15@...>
To: [email protected]
Date created: , 10:24:54 PM
Subject: [office-accessibility] How to run an accessible compare documents
with Word
Hello,
Another crucial part of my job involves running compares on documents.
I have my completed work, and I receive another document with
revisions in it. How do I compare the two so that I know what the
revisions are?
Thanks,
Chelsea