Hello!
Please see comment about cell 3 start below....
I am glad to make you aware of a code, and I think it is great that you can put
the code before the last word of the sentence and let the translator decide
where the braille line begins (to carry that to the new page - nifty!).
The question remains, however, about the cell 3 start of the text on the new
page.
Do others find this to be so? Is it a glitch in the code?
Margaret
Margaret Bradshaw – Braille Technical Transcriber
Scottish Braille Press
2A Robertson Avenue, Edinburgh EH11 1PZ | Tel: 0131 662 4445
Web: http://www.royalblind.org/accessible-media
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-----Original Message-----
From: duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of
Riessen, Kathy (SA School for Vision Impaired)
Sent: 11 December 2018 23:21
To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [duxuser] Re: Anyone familiar with kbs1 and kbe codes??
Margaret, thankyou for asking this question. I have learned something new,
never having used the [kbs] set of codes myself.
I tested Aquinas' suggestion of putting the kbs1 code at the end of the line
and it had the desired effect.
I will keep this in mind for future reference.
Kathy
Kathy Riessen
Coordinator Accessible Format Production South Australian School for Vision
Impaired
Tel: 08 8277 5255
Email: Kathleen.Riessen440@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
________________________________________
From: duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on behalf of
Aquinas Pather <apather@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, 12 December 2018 02:48
To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [duxuser] Re: Anyone familiar with kbs1 and kbe codes??
Hi Margaret,
The [kbs1] code will ensure that the next line will not be separated from the
text after the code, when the that text happens to fall on the next braille
page.
In this case, the text:
“Yours sincerely
Joe Bloggs
Head of Operations.”
will never find itself starting the new braille page, but will always have the
last line accompanying the salutation— which is the desired outcome in most
situations.
The [kbs1] could just as well have been placed immediately after the word
“here.” And then followed immediately by hard return [<] or a soft return [l]
You can test this by moving the last line of the sentence to braille line 21
and you will notice that that line and the salutation will be kept together on
the next braille page.
[kbe] terminates the character protect code This code works similarly to the
“keep text on one page (block protect)” codes [kps] and [kpe].
HTH ☺
Cheers
Aquinas Pather
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From: duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On ;
Behalf Of Margaret Bradshaw
Sent: December-11-18 7:41 AM
To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [duxuser] Anyone familiar with kbs1 and kbe codes??
Greetings
Anyone used kbs1 and kbe to keep the last line of a letter together with a
signature block?
The codes keep the text together, but the runover is in cell 3 rather than cell
1.
In the example below, the start code appears before the final word “here”
[para]Thank you for thinking of us on this occasion and for sending something
to us [kbs1] here.
Yours sincerely
Joe Bloggs
Head of Operations[kbe]
As coded above, “sending something to us here.” and the signature block appear
at the top of the next page, but starting in cell 3.
Removing the 1 results in only the word “here.” (in cell 1 of the first line of
the new page) and the signature block on the next page.
The desire is for “sending something to us here.” in cell 1 of line 1 of the
new page, followed by the signature block.
Margaret Bradshaw – Braille Technical Transcriber Scottish Braille Press Ext.
8037
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