Terry, what I'm trying to tell you is that you can't think in the
Braille settings like you do in print. On a pc or VN, "at" would
be a capital 2. If you did that in braille, by adding dot six,
it would be an eight. If you want to use eight-dot Braille, you
don't need to worry.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Powers, Terry (NIH/OD/DEAS)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: "'Braillenote List'" <[email protected]
Date: Thu, 6 Oct 2005 14:17:57 -0400
Subject: RE: [Braillenote] computer Braille
Rhonda;
The at sign is dot 4, what do you mean by shift of dot two? I
think you
ment dot 4.
Terry P
-----Original Message-----
From: Rhonda Clark [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, October 06, 2005 12:05 PM
To: BrailleNote List
Subject: [Braillenote] computer Braille
Hi, Terry:
The basic reason for the U-chord is that you cannot do a
shift-lowercase two to have it convert to an "at" sign. You
cannot add the dot six with it, because it would make it a number
eight.
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