You would lose place markers, translation settings and page numbers and automatic indents. But you will retain manual tabs, centering and right justification, and fonts if you have rtf, Word or WP as your default document type. You can also retain computer braille if you surround the computereze withthe begin computer braille and end computer braille signs used in CBC, dots 456,346 and dots 456,156 and save the file as a brf document. (Qwerty users would type underscore which is shift-hyphen plus sign which is shift equals for the begin CBC and underscore which is shift hyphen colon which is shift shift semicolon for the end CBC.)

Even if you lose the translation codes, you can still open the file and read the computereze in computer braille if you route the cursor to it.

Yes, you hit on the downside of my suggestion. As a work-around, you could keep two copies of each file, a common type for others and a KeyWord type for yourself.

My suggestion was made to help those who need to be able to have others read their documents instantly, especially when their BN is not working and the documents need to be transferred, printed, or edited using something else.

Terri Amateur Radio call sign KF6CA.

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