Cathy: There is no such thing as ASCII Braille. It just so happens that ASCII characters are used to represent braille contractions, punctuation characters and numbers Sincerely: Dave Durber ----- Original Message ----- From: "Catherine Thomas" <braille@xxxxxxxxx> To: <duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> Sent: Sunday, September 19, 2010 9:29 AM Subject: [duxuser] Alternative to 6-key entry > > > The alternative to 6-key entry is asciibraille. This involves typing the > leubpard eqiovalent of each of the 63 possible braille symbols. You > already know 26 of these by heart because they are the alphabet letters. > Asciibraille makes it easy to correct a .brf file. > If anyone would like a list of the keyboard equivalents of the 63 braille > symbols, write to me off-list and I'll send you one. > Catherine > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ---- > -Catherine Thomas > braille@xxxxxxxxx / > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- > * * * > * This message is via list duxuser at freelists.org. > * To unsubscribe, send a blank message with > * unsubscribe > * as the subject to <duxuser-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>. You may also > * subscribe, unsubscribe, and set vacation mode and other subscription > * options by visiting //www.freelists.org. The list archive > * is also located there. > * Duxbury Systems' web site is http://www.duxburysystems.com > * * * * * * * This message is via list duxuser at freelists.org. * To unsubscribe, send a blank message with * unsubscribe * as the subject to <duxuser-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>. You may also * subscribe, unsubscribe, and set vacation mode and other subscription * options by visiting //www.freelists.org. The list archive * is also located there. * Duxbury Systems' web site is http://www.duxburysystems.com * * *