Hello again, On 07-08-2020 16:41, Dave Mielke wrote: > Not easily because the list is hard-coded. This is so that a proper name for > each tale, rather than its file name, can be displayed.OK, I understand.
> In theory (though I haven't tested this recently), you can use the same file > name as an existing table and put it in the brltty folder at the top-level of > an SD card. I tried to follow these instructions, but did not succeed. All in the top root of an SD-card on an Android 9 system, wanting to overrule the default Dutch text-table 'nl (Nederlands)'. I removed the 'include ...' statements from my custom table file and then placed them: - /brltty/nl.ttb - /brltty/Tables/Text/nl.ttb - /BrlTTY/nl.ttb - /BrlTTY/Tables/Text/nl.ttb - /Android/data/org.a11y.brltty.android/nl.ttb - /Android/data/org.a11y.brltty.android/Tables/Text/nl.ttb But every time I switch from, say German to Dutch, the default table takes over. I'm testing with DOT1; this should give me the character 'a', but I get the digit '1' instead. Where should I put the overriding table exactly? If it's too much trouble, please say so. "No" is an answer, too :) Thanks again, Frans-Willem -- Met de bijlage 'signature.asc' kan uw e-mailprogramma garanderen dat bovenstaand bericht van mij afkomstig is, en onderweg niet door derden is aangepast.
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
_______________________________________________ This message was sent via the BRLTTY mailing list. To post a message, send an e-mail to: [email protected] For general information, go to: http://brltty.app/mailman/listinfo/brltty
