Hello, Till Kamppeter, on Mon 21 Dec 2015 10:47:27 -0200, wrote: > First, I would not call the two modes "ink" and "braille", but something > like "Original layout" and "Braille-optimized layout".
Ok. > Second, LibreOffice does not send .odt files when clicking "Print" in the > print dialog. By default it sends PDF, and in the settings you can switch it > to PostScript, but there is always one of these two formats selected for all > printers. I know, that's precisely what I'd like to see optionally changed. > At least the PDF sent by LibreOffice is not a bitmap of each page, but it > contains the (searchable) text and instructions for formatting and layout > (high-level/vector graphics), similar to what the .odt file contains. So it > should be possible to extract the text and formatting and re-arrange it for > the Braille output (as e-book readers can do it with PDFs or the "reflow" > mode of the Adobe Reader on Android). I know, but that's extremely far from optimal: the structure is nicely encoded inthe odt file, while finding it out from the pdf file is at *best* a pain, and will not allow proper reformatting such as putting footnotes at the bottom of pages, renumbering page references, etc. > I also doubt whether the LibreOffice developers would implement a feature > request of sending print data in .odt format, I don't see why: this doesn't seem like a hard feature to implement. Another way would have been to emit an epub or a daisy document but that's way more involved, I wouldn't try to ask for this. > but I would rather believe in that they would implement a > feature request in giving optimizing options for the PDF of the > print output, for example for e-book reader/braille embosser > text-reflow-friendliness. This feature request is actually already pending, since this is equivalent to the general accessibility of PDF files. This is however still quite far from optimal, I would really not bet on this on the long run. Samuel
