[access-uk] Re: A Braille question about round and square brackets

  • From: "Dave Taylor" <dave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 19 Apr 2008 08:08:37 +0100

Oh yes, well there you go, ultimate proof we need UEB! In print, they use 
the same symbols all the time, but in braille we don't, and that really 
doesn't help people learn these things does it! Now some braille reader will 
tell me there's no need to know the difference, but I can't agree with that, 
and think one symbol should mean the same thing, so in UEB, all brackets are 
based around GH sign to open and AR sign to close, with different preceeding 
dots for different shapes.

Cheers
Dave


--------------------------------------------------
From: "Ray's Home" <rays-home@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, April 18, 2008 5:42 PM
To: <access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject:  [access-uk] Re: A Braille question about round and square brackets

Jackie, this mightn't add much of great use to the discussion, but round
and square brackets are certainly idfferent things in the visual world,
and not just in appearance.  They're used to denote certain states or
conditions in mathematical formulae and I think programming too.  I'll
leave someone who knows what's what to explain what the difference is,
but the distinction is made for a purpose.

From Ray
I can be contacted off-list at:
mailto:ray-48@xxxxxxxx
-----Original Message-----

Jackie Cairns
Subject: [access-uk] A Braille question about round and square brackets


Re-posting this as it bounced back with a permanent administration
failure message for some strange reason!

Hi George

Thanks for clarifying the distinction between round and square, which is
now clear.  But without being pedantic, since this is very important in
the context of the exam and practice papers I'm doing, you use dot 6 and
lower G to open a square, and lower G followed by dot 3 to close, not
dot 6 as you said.  At least this is the info the Primer gives.  What
wasn't clear to me was the distinction between round and square
brackets.  Personally, a bracket is a bracket to me, but not so in
modern Braille. (smile.)

Cheers mate.

Jackie

Email: cairnsplace@xxxxxxx
Skype Name: Cairnsplace
----- Original Message -----
From: George Bell
To: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Sent: Friday, April 18, 2008 5:05 PM
Subject: [access-uk] Re: A Braille question about round and square
brackets


Hi Jackie,

Left Square Bracket = Dot 6 lower g
Right Square Bracket = Lower G dot 6.

Normal (Round) brackets = lower g either side.

George.

From: access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:access-uk@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf
Of Jackie Cairns
Sent: 18 April 2008 16:51
To: Access UK Mailing List
Subject: [access-uk] A Braille question about round and square brackets

Hi Listers

Could someone with a good working knowledge of modern Braille please
tell me what the difference is between round and square brackets?  I
know it is the lower G, or dots 2 3 5 6.  But, these days, there is the
infuriating necessity to have to use a dot 6 before the open bracket,
then the dot 3 at the end of the bracket.  But do you use these
additional dot 6 and dot 3 distinctions for round or square brackets?
The Primer I have doesn't exactly make some things crystal clear.

I'm doing the BTEC Advanced certificate in grade 2 English Braille, and
just need to clarify this for myself as I'm a bit confused to be honest.

Thanks.

Jackie

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