Dear Professor Hammond,
Thank you for the detailed response. Let me attempt to re-phrase my question in a simpler way. The overall goal is to convert existing paged print documents to braille. There are two aspects to this process. One aspect is translating the print characters to the corresponding braille characters. As a very simple example, braille does not have separate small and capital letters so titlecase words in the print source need to be preceded by a special braille character that acts rather like a markup tag. But the important point as far as this discussion is that we can consider the translation aspect of the process as a solved problem. Braille is typically represented using a transliteration to ASCII characters so a document that has been translated to braille looks similar to a plain text file. The second aspect of the process of converting a print document to braille is to format the braille file by doing such things as indenting paragraphs, centering headers, and paginating. The problem which I apparently haven't explained clearly is that according to the pagination standards, braille documents do not have separate headers or footers. Page numbers are simply appended to the first and/or last lines of the ordinary (what I called body) text on each page. These lines must, of course, be slightly shortened to accommodate the page numbers plus a space or two to separate the text from the page number. So my first question is whether one could use LaTeX to paginate an ordinary plain text document (not necessarily braille) without using headers or footers but rather with the correct page numbers included at the beginning or end of the first and/or last lines of the text on each page? Susan Jolly
