CForm control
IImage
TTable
SStatic text
WARIA landmark
XList
MElement of the same type
1Level 1 heading
2Level 2 heading
3Level 3 heading
4Level 4 heading
5Level 5 heading
6Level 6 heading
Using a braille display with VoiceOver
You can use a refreshable Bluetooth braille display to read VoiceOver output in braille, and you
can use a braille display with input keys and other controls to control iPod touch when VoiceOver
is turned on. iPod touch works with many wireless braille displays. For a list of supported displays,
go to www.apple.com/accessibility/iphone/braille-display.html.
Set up a braille display: Turn on the display, then go to Settings > General > Bluetooth and
turn on Bluetooth. Then go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille and choose
the display.
Turn contracted braille on or o Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille.
Turn eight-dot braille on or o Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > VoiceOver > Braille.
For information about common braille commands for VoiceOver navigation and information
specic to certain displays, go to support.apple.com/kb/HT4400.
The braille display uses the language that’s set for Voice Control.This is normally the language set
for iPod touch in Settings > International > Language. You can use the VoiceOver language setting
to set a dierent language for VoiceOver and braille displays.
Set the language for VoiceOver: Go to Settings > General > International > Voice Control, then
choose the language.
If you change the language for iPod touch, you may need to reset the language for VoiceOver and
your braille display.
You can set the leftmost or rightmost cell of your braille display to provide system status and
other information:
Announcement History contains an unread message Â
The current Announcement History message hasn’t been read Â
VoiceOver speech is muted Â
The iPod touch battery is low (less than 20% charge) Â
iPod touch is in landscape orientation Â
The screen display is turned o Â
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Chapter 30 Accessibility