Speaker 1: Welcome to the third of six training videos on JAWS Inspect Reporting. This training video focuses on and is meant to provide a brief overview of the JAWS Inspect Say-All report. The Say-All report is a linear view of the JAWS speech output in the order it spoken, as JAWS reads the webpage from top to bottom. First, you need to open whatever webpage you wish to test. For demonstration purposes, we will use this fictitious website and a Chrome browser. To invoke the JAWS Inspect Report menu as with all JAWS Inspect reports, hold down the control key and right-click your mouse. From here, choose and click the menu's third report called the Say-All report. Once JAWS Inspect completes crawling through the page it will automatically ring up the sale report in a new browser tab. The Say-All report is an excellent way to compare a JAWS speech with the ordered content of the page to ensure there are no differences and to identify elements on the page that are not announced by JAWS. Just because a page visually appears acceptable does not mean that JAWS is going to read it in a logical order or that something is not missing for JAWS screen readers. Let's briefly walk through the report's features. Like all our JAWS Inspect reports, in the upper left header, you will see the URL chosen for the report, the date and time the report was generated, the browser used, and references to the JAWS and JAWS Inspect versions. You can view the JAWS speech order either in text flow or table view. The text flow view is useful by highlighting in yellow keywords that help identify objects and elements on a page that are not visible that are expressed by JAWS with the screen readers benefit. The table view has additional data points similar to other reports in JAWS Inspect. Let's quickly refresh ourselves on the meaning of these data fields. Select is where you can elect to choose all or a subset of the data rows that you want to export. JAWS speech output displays what the JAWS user will hear. Code is a link to the associated in each TML code snippet. ID is either the unique HTML element ID, or if none is available, a unique ID that JAWS Inspect provides. This is used to identify any of the rows that you may want to export and upload into your problem management system for remediation tracking. Just like all JAWS Inspect reports, you can export the data to a CSV file by clicking the export button. But in this case, you can also export to a text file by clicking export text. Okay. This concludes our video training session on the Say-All report. TPGI hopes you've found this overview of the Say-All report helpful as you go through your JAWS Inspect journey, and we appreciate you watching. Thank you.