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14301439 of 1938 results
1430.
Misspelled word: %s
Translators: Orca tries to provide more compelling output of the spell check
dialog in some applications. The first thing it does is let the user know
what the misspelled word is.
སྡེབ་འཛོལ་ཡོད་པའི་མིང་ཚིག:%s
Translated and reviewed by Tshewang Norbu
Located in src/orca/messages.py:1724
1431.
Context is %s
Translators: Orca tries to provide more compelling output of the spell check
dialog in some applications. The second thing it does is give the phrase
containing the misspelled word in the document. This is known as the context.
སྐབས་དོན་འདི་%s
Translated and reviewed by Tshewang Norbu
Located in src/orca/messages.py:1729
1432.
Browse mode
Translators: Orca has a number of commands that override the default
behavior within an application. For instance, on a web page, "h" moves
you to the next heading. What should happen when you press an "h" in
an entry on a web page depends: If you want to resume reading content,
"h" should move to the next heading; if you want to enter text, "h"
should not move you to the next heading. Similarly, if you are
at the bottom of an entry and press Down arrow, should you leave the
entry? Again, it depends on if you want to resume reading content or
if you are editing the text in the entry. Because Orca doesn't know
what you want to do, it has two modes: In browse mode, Orca treats
key presses as commands to read the content; in focus mode, Orca treats
key presses as something that should be handled by the focused widget.
This string is the message presented when Orca switches to browse mode.
(no translation yet)
Located in src/orca/messages.py:1744
1433.
Focus mode
Translators: Orca has a number of commands that override the default
behavior within an application. For instance, on a web page, "h" moves
you to the next heading. What should happen when you press an "h" in
an entry on a web page depends: If you want to resume reading content,
"h" should move to the next heading; if you want to enter text, "h"
should not move you to the next heading. Similarly, if you are
at the bottom of an entry and press Down arrow, should you leave the
entry? Again, it depends on if you want to resume reading content or
if you are editing the text in the entry. Because Orca doesn't know
what you want to do, it has two modes: In browse mode, Orca treats
key presses as commands to read the content; in focus mode, Orca treats
key presses as something that should be handled by the focused widget.
This string is the message presented when Orca switches to focus mode.
(no translation yet)
Located in src/orca/messages.py:1759
1434.
To enable focus mode press %s.
Translators: Orca has a number of commands that override the default
behavior within an application. For instance, on a web page, "h" moves
you to the next heading. What should happen when you press an "h" in
an entry on a web page depends: If you want to resume reading content,
"h" should move to the next heading; if you want to enter text, "h"
should not move you to the next heading. Similarly, if you are
at the bottom of an entry and press Down arrow, should you leave the
entry? Again, it depends on if you want to resume reading content or
if you are editing the text in the entry. Because Orca doesn't know
what you want to do, it has two modes: In browse mode, Orca treats
key presses as commands to read the content; in focus mode, Orca treats
key presses as something that should be handled by the focused widget.
This string is a tutorial message presented to the user who has just
navigated to a widget in browse mode to inform them of the keystroke
they must press to enable focus mode for the purposes of interacting
with the widget. The substituted string is a human-consumable keybinding
such as "Alt+Shift+A."
(no translation yet)
Located in src/orca/messages.py:1778
1435.
Focus mode is sticky.
Translators: (Please see the previous, detailed translator notes about
Focus mode and Browse mode.) In order to minimize the amount of work Orca
users need to do to switch between focus mode and browse mode, Orca attempts
to automatically switch to the mode which is appropriate to the current
web element. Sometimes, however, this automatic mode switching is not what
the user wants. A good example being web apps which have their own keyboard
navigation and use interaction model. As a result, Orca has a command which
enables setting a "sticky" focus mode which disables all automatic toggling.
This string is the message presented when Orca switches to sticky focus mode.
(no translation yet)
Located in src/orca/messages.py:1789
1436.
Browse mode is sticky.
Translators: (Please see the previous, detailed translator notes about
Focus mode and Browse mode.) In order to minimize the amount of work Orca
users need to do to switch between focus mode and browse mode, Orca attempts
to automatically switch to the mode which is appropriate to the current
web element. Sometimes, however, this automatic mode switching is not what
the user wants. A good example being web apps which have their own keyboard
navigation and use interaction model. As a result, Orca has a command which
enables setting a "sticky" browse mode which disables all automatic toggling.
This string is the message presented when Orca switches to sticky browse mode.
(no translation yet)
Located in src/orca/messages.py:1800
1437.
Mouse over object not found.
Translators: Hovering the mouse over certain objects on a web page causes a
new object to appear such as a pop-up menu. Orca has a command will move the
user to the object which just appeared as a result of the user hovering the
mouse. If this command fails, Orca will present this message.
(no translation yet)
Located in src/orca/messages.py:1837
1438.
Mouse review disabled.
Translators: Orca has a feature to speak the item under the pointer. This feature,
known as mouse review, can be enabled and disabled via command. The following is
the message which Orca will present when mouse review is toggled off via command.
(no translation yet)
Located in src/orca/messages.py:1842
1439.
Mouse review enabled.
Translators: Orca has a feature to speak the item under the pointer. This feature,
known as mouse review, can be enabled and disabled via command. The following is
the message which Orca will present when mouse review is toggled on via command.
(no translation yet)
Located in src/orca/messages.py:1847
14301439 of 1938 results

This translation is managed by Dzongkha Ubuntu Translators, assigned by Ubuntu Translators.

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Contributors to this translation: Tshewang Norbu, norbu.