Hi J.J., I too have the same issue; I've been writing a large application, and unfortunately haven't considered the needs of braille users. in particular, I've been formatting badly pronounced strings so that speech would pronounce them better. I haven't been giving any attention to how a braille user would feel about the changes I'm making to the text.
have other scripters tackled this issue? is the only thing to do to make use of exception dictionaries but nothing else, or have others done anything more elaborate? my reformatting of strings is often only possible because I know the context of the meaning of the string at the time it's generated; processing it later on, say with an exception dictionary, would not yield anything like as good results. thanks for any ideas. Chip -----Original Message----- From: J.J. Meddaugh [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Friday, November 27, 2009 12:30 AM To: [email protected] Subject: Braille Display Question with Speak Have a seemingly obvious question, but I don't have a braille display so am not sure. If I want a message to go on the braille display as well as speak, do I need to use speak as well as braille.display with the appropriate check for a braille display or will speak also braille the message by default? Or is there a way to do both at once, short of message boxes and dialogs? Thanks. J.J. Meddaugh - ATGuys.com A premier Licensed Code Factory and KNFB Reader distributor
