Kimberly,

The manual said that about Braille documents? Hmmm...  that's wrong.

First, make sure you have selected a printer type, other than Standard, in the 
Printer setup Menu (accessed by pressing W from the Main Menu, then P and S, 
and navigating through the items).  If it says, "Standard, change?", press Y 
for yes, then ENTER.  You will be asked to select the type of printer.  The 
"Standard" setting does not support underlining.

Next, remember that the fonts menu can be accessed within a Braille or text 
document by pressing ENTER with F (CTRL with T).  Then you type a letter which 
will correspond to the type of font or appearance you want on the ink-printed 
copy.  You type N to turn it ON (take note of that, you do not type Y for yes 
which is a common mistake of users, but N for ON).  You type F to turn it OFF.  
Of course, you turn on a certain option in the Font Menu when the cursor is at 
the beginning of the text that will be affected by this command, and you turn 
it off when the cursor is positioned at the end of that text.

For underlining, however, there is a keyboard shortcut.  Press ENTER with U 
(CTRL with U), then type N to turn it ON or F to turn it OFF.  The Start 
Underline indicator is displayed as dots 1-2-4-6 followed by the letters f s u. 
 The End Underline indicator is displayed as dots 1-2-4-6 followed by the 
letters f e u.  You will only see the indicators, however, if the cursor is on 
them, or if you're in the Edit Mode for the Braille display.

HTH,
Roselle

>----- QUOTED MESSAGE -----
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>When using the BrailleNote and inputting in braille how does one underline 
>text so that it shows up in a print copy?  I tried using dots 4,6 but it 
>doesn't come out in print.  I also tried going to the format menu and entering 
>"U" but instead of underlining as the manual told me it should I got a error 
>beep.  Does anyone know how to do this?


>Kimberly Higham, TVI, CCPS



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