[duxuser] Re: Please help!

  • From: "Eileen Scrivani" <etscrivani@xxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 14 Sep 2010 13:15:05 -0400

MessageSteve,

Yes, of course you're right.  My thoughts went off in a different direction -- 
sorry folks.

Eileen 



From: Steve Dresser 
Sent: Tuesday, September 14, 2010 12:02 PM
To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
Subject: [duxuser] Re: Please help!


Eileen,

That option doesn't work if the file is a scanned image, in which case you have 
to rely on the OCR solutions mentioned in other posts.

Steve

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Eileen Scrivani 
  To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Sent: Tuesday, September 14, 2010 11:30
  Subject: [duxuser] Re: Please help!



  There is an option in Adobe Reader V9 (accessible version) under the file 
menu that will let you save the .PDF as a text document.  I know this doesn't 
give the formatting options of Word, but it is a quick & easy way of getting 
the text that you then can at least bring into Word for further formatting.

  HTH.
  Eileen 


  From: Eileen Misrahi 
  Sent: Tuesday, September 14, 2010 10:28 AM
  To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx 
  Subject: [duxuser] Re: Please help!


  George, 

   

  In general, when working with PDF files that the document has been saved as a 
scanned image, I will use one of the virtual printer that is bundled with 
either Kurzweil or Open Book. At that point, I can save the document in a Word 
format. DBT only likes Word 2003 for now until the new version is release.I 
don't know if this will work for Rosie. It's a lot of work just to get a PDF 
file to work with DBT, but this is what I needed to do while in graduate school 
and the professors sure liked scanning the supplemental readings as a PDF file. 

   

  Eileen 

   

  From: duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On 
Behalf Of George Bell
  Sent: Tuesday, September 14, 2010 7:17 AM
  To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Subject: [duxuser] Re: Please help!

   

  Hi Rosie,

   

  Nothing like being flung in at the deep end!  (Smile)

   

  .xls files are usually Excel 2003 or earlier Spreadsheets, and can't be 
opened directly into DBT.  What you may be able to do is open the spreadsheet 
in Excel, and do a "Save As", saving it as say a CSV file (Comma Separated 
Variable)

   

  However, you will need to understand what the spreadsheet is all about.

   

  As regards PDF files, they cannot be opened directly in DBT either since they 
are essentially a special format.  However, if you have an up to date version 
of Adobe Reader, you MAY be able to again do a Save As in Adobe, and Save As 
text.

   

  And there is a "however" here too.  This will only work if the PDF has been 
created from a Word Processing package like Word for Windows.  Sometimes people 
will scan a printed document, and then produce a PDF from that.  Net result is 
that you won't get any text at all.

   

  George.

   

  From: duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On 
Behalf Of Rosy Goodrich
  Sent: 14 September 2010 15:00
  To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  Subject: [duxuser] Please help!

   

  Hi Listers:

   

  I have a .xls file to be translated into Braille.  Could someone enlighten me 
as to how to proceed with this.  The other file I have is .pdf, and I need to 
remove all the bullets and replace them with dashes.  Any help would be 
appreciated greatly.  Thanks in advance.

  Rosy and Ariel

  rgoodrich@xxxxxxxxx

   

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