The Images on the Poet program need to be described by a person, so I don't think that would be a help, since just its being described as "chart" isn't what you want. smile Cindy >________________________________ > From: "Jamie Yates, CPhT" <mirxtech@xxxxxxxxx> >To: bksvol-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx >Sent: Saturday, February 11, 2012 12:56 PM >Subject: [bksvol-discuss] Re: Knitting books > > >The charts are not nearly as hard as a family tree, but it is a lot of work to >type the symbols and to make sure they are correct. > >Like I might do: > >(granted I'm not a hand knitter only a machine knitter and I haven't done it >in a while so I might make up some stitches here) > >x = knit >o = purl >/ = psso > >And here is the chart: >Row 1: xxxxxxxxxxooooooooooxxxxxxxxxx >Row 2: xxxxxxxxxxxooooooooxxxxxxxxxx >Row 3: xxxxxxxxxxxxooooooxxxxxxxxxxxx > >Well, that's enough to give you an idea. You just type out exactly what the >chart has. If it uses x, o and / then you use those. If it uses symbols you >can't duplicate on your keyboard, I assign it a letter or a number and put >that in the key. > >So they're not "hard" like figuring out a family tree, just a lot of work in >typing them and making sure you've typed them correctly. > > > > >-- >Jamie in Michigan > >Currently Reading:Heads You Lose by Lisa Lutz > > > >See everything I've read this year at: www.michiganrxtech.com/books.html > > >