NFBtrans had a back translation function. It wasn't hard to compile on
Linux, but it is old software now.
On 1/5/2021 3:34 AM, Xuebing Wang wrote:
Hi community,
I am trying to convert from 6-dot braille coding to human-readable
text (e.g. ascii), any suggestions on if there are any current
On Wed, Jan 06, 2021 at 11:17:11AM +0100, Mario Lang wrote:
> Dave Mielke writes:
>
> > [quoted lines by S. Massy on 2021/01/04 at 20:04 -0500]
> >
> >>Switching away from EN_US.UTF8 to fix date formats,
> >
> > You might find that en_IE is better than en_GB for that as it keeps the
> >
Thats exactly right. Also I have gotten that "not supported" message even when
pairing under voiceover, braille,
Choose a braille display. I have seen others post about this; some kind of
intermittant bug.
Make voiceover forget the device; thats what fixed my pairing problem.
Also reboot your
Dave Mielke writes:
> [quoted lines by S. Massy on 2021/01/04 at 20:04 -0500]
>
>>Switching away from EN_US.UTF8 to fix date formats,
>
> You might find that en_IE is better than en_GB for that as it keeps the
> overall
> output format of the date command the same.
The different LC_*
Morning, Kyle,
Just a thought before you give up on your search for a connection with IOS!
I attempted to connect my Orbit Reader with IOS on the iPhone 7 with no luck
- indeed I got a message that the device is not supported.
By chance, I discovered that the only way to connect a braille