Hi, Mario! I'm curious ablut your request. In Norway the braille authority group is discussing if we should define no-breaking space to zero dots. When you read a web page, for instance, a sighted person does not distinguish between space and no-breaking space. Why would a braille reader like to distinguish between these characters?
The Norwegian braille table for BRLTTY, no-generic.ttb, has defined no-breaking space as an alias for space. I'd appreciate if you could explain why you want to define the character to a representation other than zero dots. Thanks in advance, Lars On Fri, Dec 04, 2020 at 05:46:24PM +0100, Mario Lang wrote: > Hi. > > To all german users: I just noticed there is no mapping in de.ttb which > maps to a sole dot 7. Any objections to mapping non-breaking spaces to > dot 7? > > -- > CYa, > ⡍⠁⠗⠊⠕ > _______________________________________________ > 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 _______________________________________________ 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
