Hi George, Okay, I'm confused. I got some knitting patterns from the Internet and it's listed html. I thought I could just use Duxbury--cut and paste--but it was a mess. I got lots of interesting things including the greater-than and less-than words. So I did the next one by going to Word first. Then I had to copy and paste it into Duxbury. But reading your response causes me to ask: are you saying that I can take a html file and go to Duxbury, apply the compu codes and the file will translate without all the extraneous info? And maybe it's my lack of sleep that's the problem here. Thanks, Confused in rainy Carolina -----Original Message----- From: duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of George Bell Sent: Thursday, February 24, 2005 4:54 AM To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [duxuser] Re: HTML Braille Translation Hi Karina, The likes of HTML code should be translated in Computer Braille. If it is a block of text on its own, so to speak, highlight the text concerned and apply the DBT Style "compdisplay." It it is HTML text within a sentence such as "<p>" for example, highlight the HTML and apply the "compinline" Style. This ensures that your normal text is translated using literary rules, and the HTML using Computer Braille Code. George. _____ From: duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Karina Gregory Sent: 23 February 2005 23:06 To: duxuser Subject: [duxuser] HTML Braille Translation Hi List Members, I have some HTML code that I need to translate into Braille. There's a quite a bit that appears in one block. However, when I translate it using English (British) - literary no capitals the words are written out as in greater than and less than etc. When I have seen it done before less than has oppeared as an ow and greater than an o. Is this correct notation, and if so, how do I get Duxbury to use this format? Thanks. Karina _____ This Message has been scanned for viruses by McAfee Groupshield.