Sorry if I'm doubling messages again, I think my computer's tired and needs to go to bed, or it's on a go slow. No George, I would need a lesson or two Alan. -----Original Message----- From: George Bell [mailto:info@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, 18 March 2004 1:45 PM To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [duxuser] Re: FW: embedding brl dots in e-mails O.K., Alan, Would you care to comment the Topic itself. Do you (and everyone else) understand it? Could you now apply the codes I described? George. _____ From: duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Blackburn, Alan Sent: 18 March 2004 02:38 To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [duxuser] Re: FW: embedding brl dots in e-mails Wow George It Worked! At least on my computer anyway! ,n[1 :at d y get f ?8 Alan. -----Original Message----- From: George Bell [mailto:info@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, 18 March 2004 1:18 PM To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [duxuser] Re: FW: embedding brl dots in e-mails Hi Alan, You have raised a very interesting question, and indeed one I have been hesitating to ask for some time now. In theory, any DBT user should have the Braille and Simbraille fonts installed by default. However in some cases, it may be that they need to be manually installed from the c:\duxbury folder. However to view them correctly, one needs to send HTML messages. That said, many list members have their systems set to only be able to view test only messages, so any formatting and fonts would not be seen properly. I would absolutely LOVE to be able to send you all messages with examples from the new Help files I am working on, but unless your systems have the appropriate fonts installed, and such like, they may appear a complete mess outside of DBT itself. O.K. I will bight the proverbial bullet. See what the Print Versus Braille topic looks like in this message. All I have done is copy and paste from DBT 10.5's Help screen. George Bell. Print v Braille. Codes used: [ifbrl] and/or [ifprt] There are often cases where it is necessary to change the wording between print and braille documents. For example, print text might say: This book is available in braille. Where the braille text should say:- This book is available in print. Usage in DBT: This book is available in [ifprt]braille. [ifbrl]print. NOTE: If you turn Coded View off in DBT, your screen will show:- This book is available in braille. But produces in Braille: ,? book is availa# 9 brl4pr9t4 _____ From: duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Blackburn, Alan Sent: 18 March 2004 01:59 To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [duxuser] FW: embedding brl dots in e-mails G'day all, I have a technical question which I intend to post across several lists, so my apologies in advance to those of you who have to put up with multi-copies. Is there an easy way to "embed" Braille into an e-mail so it shows as dots on the received e-mail (other than sending it as an attachment)? If there is it would enable us to avoid the "dot 3, dot 4-5-6-" "en-in-ing-" gibberish we resort to to communicate Braille questions. I did a little test using ascii code, and also copy/paste from a .dxb (Duxbury) file (also ascii) which seemed to work as long as the receiving computer had a Braille font installed. I don't know how well it would work with screen readers/Jaws etc. Any ideas? Alan. ********************************************************************** This message is intended for the addressee named and may contain privileged information or confidential information or both. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it and notify the sender. ********************************************************************** ********************************************************************** This message is intended for the addressee named and may contain privileged information or confidential information or both. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it and notify the sender. ********************************************************************** ********************************************************************** This message is intended for the addressee named and may contain privileged information or confidential information or both. If you are not the intended recipient please delete it and notify the sender. **********************************************************************