Google Guide

A guide for Jaws users, written by Chorlton Workshop for hsbp.

Introduction

A search engine is a program for searching the web for pages which are relevant to a set of search terms. There are lots of search engines available, but Google is the best general purpose search engine, and its web address is www.google.com.

The remaining sections of the document are as follows. The searching section gives a basic outline of how to search, and there are then more detailed sections on the Google home page, results page, search terms, and preferences.

Searching

These are the instructions for searching from Google's home page. You can also search from any results page using one of the edit boxes.

  1. Go to www.google.com.
  2. The initial focus is the edit box for your search terms. So just press ENTER to go into forms mode, type in your search terms, and then press ENTER.
  3. Google produces the first results page. A number of results are displayed on each page, and the results are ordered by relevancy. At the bottom of each results page there are links to the other results pages.

A number of search options can be set on the preferences page, which is described in the preferences section. Of particular interest to Jaws users is the ability to set the number of results on each results page. The default number is 10, and normally, useful search results occur within the first 2 or 3 pages. So setting the number of results per page to 30 saves you having to navigate between the search pages.

Home page

The page title is Google, and the page contents include:

Results page

Page structure

The page title is the search terms dash Google, and the page contents include:

Search result

A search result is normally for a web page, but can also be for a file — for example, a Word or PDF file. The format of a result for a web page is:

The format of a result for a file is:

Skipping the sponsored results

If you're only interested in finding web pages, and not files, then to skip the sponsored results, you can use the fact that a search result for a web page contains a Cashed link, but the sponsored results don't. So to move to the first search result:

  1. Press INSERT + F7 to open the links list dialog.
  2. Press C until you come to the first Cached link.
  3. Move up one item in the list, using UP ARROW, to move to the first search result link.
  4. TAB to the Move to link button, and press ENTER.

If you're interested in finding files as well as web pages, then you can use the fact that all search results contain a similar pages link, but sponsored links don't:

  1. Press INSERT + F7 to open the links list dialog.
  2. Press S until you come to the first Similar pages link.
  3. Move up one item in the list, using UP ARROW. If this is a Cached link, then move up another item in the list. You should now be on the first search result link.
  4. TAB to the Move to link button, and press ENTER.

Search terms

Default treatment of search terms

Phrase search

To find pages which include an exact phrase, put quotation marks around the phrase. Note that your search terms can include other terms in addition to the exact phrase. Examples:

Negative terms

These can be useful if your search terms have more than one meaning. If you put a minus sign immediately before a term, then that term is avoided( You must leave a space before the minus sign ).

“+” search

This is used to include a common term which would otherwise be automatically excluded by Google. Put a plus sign immediately before a term ( and a space before the plus sign ) to include the term.

Synonym search

To search for synonyms of a search term, rather than just the term, put a tilde ( ~ ) sign immediately in front of the term, and leave a space in front of the tilde sign.

Preferences

You can get to the preferences page by opening the preferences link on either the home page or a results page. If you make any changes, remember to press one of the Save Preferences buttons.

Navigating would be easier if it were well formated. If you have Jaws version 6 and above, then the keystrokes for finding and listing specific types of form control are useful. If not, then just use the keystrokes for finding and listing form controls.

Page contents

The title of the page is Preferences, and the contents of the page include:

Setting the search language

There is a set of two radio buttons, with labels:

Following the second radio button are large number of check boxes for specifying the languages you want, if the second radio is selected.

Setting the number of results

The number of results per page is set using a combo box with the label Display.