[bookshare-discuss] Re: txt files

  • From: talmage@xxxxxxxxxx
  • To: bookshare-discuss@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sun, 03 Oct 2004 09:22:22 -0400

Hi Kellie, Cindy, and Shelley,

I like the SemWare Editor (T S E), which provides the user with a great 
deal of flexibility in customizing it to their personal preferences.  If 
you do a search on the web, you'll probably be able to find it fairly 
easily.  If nobody comes up with a link for their web site, I'll find 1 and 
post it later today.
There are also a number of free editors in the Blind Programmers library, I 
haven't used them, but others using screen reader and braille displays have 
and recommend them.
They are under the link to:
General and Miscellaneous
at
http://www.blindprogramming.com

Cindy, unfortunately I can't recommend any editors for you since you're 
working on a Mac, but I'm sure there many out there.  A text editor is 
basically a stripped down word processor, which usually saves in ASCII Text 
format.  They are usually line oriented, rather than whysiwug (what you see 
is what you get).  What I mean by line oriented, is that you have a line of 
text, a line feed / carriage return, page break, etc.  They don't typically 
save font info, do fancy print jobs, or go overboard with other special 
attributes.  Most people now a days find them useful for writing source 
code for program compilers, and as simple note takers.  It could be said 
that Windows NotePad is a text editor, but a very inflexible one at that.

HTH

Dave


At 04:12 PM 10/2/2004, you wrote:
>Hi Dave,
>Can you suggest any editors, besides Kurzweil and presumably OpenBook, Which
>do txt files with page breaks etc maintained? What you said about companies
>using bad txt types to force conversion to their formats makes a lot of
>sense--obvious maybe but it hadn't occurred to me.
>Thanks,
>Kellie


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