This release includes improvements to performance, responsiveness and stability of audio output.Options have been added to control the volume of NVDA sounds and beeps, or to have them follow the volume of the voice you are using.
There's been several braille fixes, improving device detection and caret movement.It is now possible to opt-out unwanted drivers from automatic detection, to improve autodetection performance.There are also new BRLTTY commands.
This release introduces the Add-on Store to replace the Add-ons Manager.In the Add-on Store you can browse, search, install and update community add-ons.You can now manually override incompatibility issues with outdated add-ons at your own risk.
There are new braille features, commands, and display support.There are also new input gestures for OCR and flattened object navigation.Navigating and reporting formatting in Microsoft Office is improved.
Note: this is an Add-on API compatibility breaking release.Add-ons will need to be re-tested and have their manifest updated.Please refer to the developer guide for information on NVDA's API deprecation and removal process.
These deprecations are currently not scheduled for removal.The deprecated aliases will remain until further notice.Please test the new API and provide feedback.For add-on authors, please open a GitHub issue if these changes stop the API from meeting your needs.
These are proposed API breaking changes.The deprecated part of the API will continue to be available until the specified release.If no release is specified, the plan for removal has not been determined.Note, the roadmap for removals is 'best effort' and may be subject to change.Please test the new API and provide feedback.For add-on authors, please open a GitHub issue if these changes stop the API from meeting your needs.
This release includes major improvements to UIA support with MS Office.For Microsoft Office 16.0.15000 and higher on Windows 11, NVDA will use UI Automation to access Microsoft Word documents by default.This provides a significant performance improvement over the old Object model access.
There are improvements to braille display drivers including Seika Notetaker, Papenmeier and HID Braille. There are also various Windows 11 bug fixes, for apps such as Calculator, Console, Terminal, Mail and Emoji Panel.
This release introduces support for the new HID Braille specification.This specification aims to standardise support for Braille Displays without needing individual drivers.There are updates to eSpeak-NG and LibLouis, including new Russian and Tshivenda tables.Error sounds can be enabled in stable builds of NVDA via a new advanced settings option.Say all in Word now scrolls the view to keep the current position visible.There are lots of improvements when using Office with UIA.One UIA fix is that Outlook now ignores more types of layout tables in messages.
Due to an update to our security certificate, a small number of users get an error when NVDA 2021.2 checks for updates.NVDA now asks Windows to update security certificates, which will prevent this error in future.Affected users will need to download this update manually.
This release introduces preliminary Windows 11 support.While Windows 11 is yet to be released, this release has been tested on preview versions of Windows 11.This includes an important fix for Screen Curtain (see important notes).The COM Registration Fixing Tool can now resolve more problems when running NVDA.There are updates to the synthesizer eSpeak and braille translator LibLouis.There are also various bug fixes and improvements, notably for braille support and Windows terminals, calculator, emoji panel and clipboard history.
Due to a change in the Windows Magnification API, Screen Curtain had to be updated to support the newest versions of Windows.Use NVDA 2021.2 to activate Screen Curtain with Windows 10 21H2 (10.0.19044) or later.This includes Windows 10 Insiders and Windows 11.For security purposes, when using a new version of Windows, get visual confirmation that the Screen Curtain makes the screen entirely black.
This release includes optional experimental support for UIA in Excel and Chromium browsers.There are fixes for several languages, and for accessing links in Braille.There are updates to Unicode CLDR, mathematical symbols, and LibLouis.As well as many bug fixes and improvements, including in Office, Visual Studio, and several languages.
This release includes new Chinese Input methods, an update to Liblouis and the elements list (NVDA+f7) now works in focus mode.Context sensitive help is now available when pressing F1 in NVDA dialogs.Improvements to symbol pronunciation rules, speech dictionary, Braille message and skim reading.Bug fixes and improvements to Mail, Outlook, Teams, Visual Studio, Azure Data Studio, Foobar2000.On the web, there are improvements to Google Docs, and greater support for ARIA.Plus many other important bug fixes and improvements.
This release includes several large improvements to stability and performance particularly in Microsoft Office applications. There are new settings to toggle touchscreen support and graphics reporting.The existence of marked (highlighted) content can be reported in browsers, and there are new German braille tables.
Highlights of this release include support for a new braille display from Nattiq, better support for ESET antivirus GUI and Windows Terminal, performance improvements in 1Password, and with Windows OneCore synthesizer. Plus many other important bug fixes and improvements.
Highlights of this release include support for several new braille displays from HumanWare and APH, plus many other important bug fixes such as the ability to again read math in Microsoft Word using MathPlayer / MathType.
NVDA 2019.3 is a very significant release containing many under-the-hood changes including the upgrade of Python 2 to Python 3, and a major re-write of NVDA's speech subsystem.Although these changes do break compatibility with older NVDA add-ons, the upgrade to Python 3 is necessary for security, and the changes to speech allow for some exciting innovations in the near future. Other highlights in this release include 64 bit support for Java VMs, Screen Curtain and Focus Highlight functionality, support for more braille displays and a new Braille viewer, and many many other bug fixes.
Highlights of this release include auto detection of Freedom Scientific braille displays, an experimental setting in the Advanced panel to stop browse mode from automatically moving focus (which may provide performance improvements), a rate boost option for the Windows OneCore synthesizer to achieve very fast rates, and many other bug fixes.
Highlights of this release include performance improvements when accessing both Microsoft word and Excel, stability and security improvements such as support for add-ons with version compatibility information, and many other bug fixes.
Please note that starting from this release of NVDA, custom appModules, globalPlugins, braille display drivers and synth drivers will no longer be automatically loaded from your NVDA user configuration directory. Rather these should be installed as part of an NVDA add-on. For those developing code for an add-on, code for testing can be placed in a new developer scratchpad directory in the NVDA user configuration directory, if the Developer scratchpad option is turned on in NVDA's new Advanced settings panel.These changes are necessary to better ensure compatibility of custom code, so that NVDA does not break when this code becomes incompatible with newer releases.Please refer to the list of changes further down for more details on this and how add-ons are now better versioned.
Highlights of this release include performance improvements in recent Mozilla Firefox versions, announcement of emojis with all synthesizers, reporting of replied/forwarded status in Outlook, reporting the distance of the cursor to the edge of a Microsoft Word page, and many bug fixes.
Highlights of this release include Support for tables in Kindle for PC, support for HumanWare BrailleNote Touch and BI14 Braille displays, Improvements to both Onecore and Sapi5 speech synthesizers, improvements in Microsoft Outlook and much more.
Highlights of this release include support for charts in Microsoft word and PowerPoint, support for new braille displays including Eurobraille and the Optelec protocol converter, improved support for Hims and Optelec braille displays, performance improvements for Mozilla Firefox 58 and higher, and much more.
Highlights of this release include many fixes and enhancements to web support including browse mode for web dialogs by default, better reporting of field group labels in browse mode, support for new Windows 10 technologies such as Windows Defender Application Guard and Windows 10 on ARM64, and automatic reporting of screen orientation and battery status.Please note that this version of NVDA no longer supports Windows XP or Windows Vista. The minimum requirement for NVDA is now windows 7 with Service Pack 1.
Highlights of this release include input of contracted braille, support for new Windows OneCore voices available on Windows 10, in-built support for Windows 10 OCR, and many significant improvements regarding Braille and the web.
Highlights of this release include full support for audio ducking in the Windows 10 Creators Update; fixes for several selection issues in browse mode, including problems with select all; significant improvements in Microsoft Edge support; and improvements on the web such as indication of elements marked as current (using aria-current).
Highlights of this release include reporting of sections and text columns in Microsoft Word; Support for reading, navigating and annotating books in Kindle for PC; and improved support for Microsoft Edge.
Highlights of this release include the ability to disable individual add-ons; support for form fields in Microsoft Excel; significant improvements to reporting of colors; fixes and improvements related to several braille displays; and fixes and improvements to support for Microsoft Word.
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