It used to be that I could use the DUSCI code and it would present as a little
smiley face image in the print version and an appropriate code when translated.
Now, even though those codes are still listed on Duxbury's help page @$<white
smiling face>/@$<white smiling face appears (which will work) if I use the
263A in the DUSCI window, or the letter I if I use FF6A. If I cut and paste the
image from a Word document, it translates to the Unicode @$u"6#bfc;awhich works
also. More a curiosity than anything else.
Pat
[cid:793e10fd-9650-4d5a-b823-c9abb3519ddd]
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From: duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on behalf of
CHELA Robles <cdrobles693@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Friday, May 27, 2022 6:29 AM
To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [duxuser] Re: Emojis
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If I remember from lesson 14 from the NLS UEB literary course offered by
theNFB, in the US, you have to put following dot patterns followed by the first
two letters of the type of emoticon. You have to put dot 5, dots 1,2,4,6
followed by the letters sm for the :) and then make a transcriber note
explaining it's a smiley face. By the way, I'm on lesson 15 now. :-)
Sent from my iPhone
On May 27, 2022, at 2:14 AM, george@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
Is there an official UEB braille code for a smiley face?
George
From: duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of
Patricia Balassone
Sent: 26 May 2022 18:24
To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [duxuser] Emojis
Is anyone else having a problem inserting a smiley face into their Duxbury
document? I've tried both the unicode character code and DUSCI, but neither
shows the little emoji for smiley or frowny face. I'm currently using 12.5 SR4.
Thanks,
Patricia
Lansing MI