Hi Again,

I know these three methods, but i'm looking for a better solution to read the 
characters without either setting pronounciation to all nor read character by 
character.

Say i have the greek small symbol tau, if it's connected to any other character 
it won't read on any setting other than read all. Is therre any way to bind for 
instance the tau symbol to a "tau" word, like an alias of the word so that next 
time voice over passes the line, it identifies the symbol as a word.

Any help greatly appreciated.

Yuma 








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On 2/03/2013, at 11:56 AM, Harry Hogue <harryhog...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Hello,
> 
> The best way to read detailed formatting like this is to use a Braille 
> display.  Failing that, setting punctuation to "All" can also work well, or, 
> failing that, read the section character-by-character.
> 
> HTH,
> 
> Harry
> 
> On Mar 1, 2013, at 2:36 AM, Yuma Antoine Decaux <jamy...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
>> Hi all,
>> 
>> I'm still having a lot of trouble reading math symbols properly with voice 
>> over, especially when they are typed in a stream of characters. For instance 
>> the greek capital letter phi reads fine by itself, but not when compounded 
>> with an & symbol and another greek letter after it, with spacing. 
>> 
>> Is there no other granular method of reading out a sentence?
>> 
>> Best regards,
>> 
>> Yuma 
>> 
>> 
>> <zato1.jpg>
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> "Light has no value without darkness"
>> Mob: +61 (0)410732547
>> Skype: Shainobi1
>> twitter: http://www.twitter.com/triple7
>> 
>> This message is protected by article 4-210 of a certain book of laws but you 
>> don't have to worry about privacy issues if you are the intended recipient. 
>> However, if any freakish circumstance such as ip sniffing, honey pot open 
>> relay servers or an honest mistake caused a transmission error, please 
>> advise the sender and throw your laptop into a bubble bath to avoid all 
>> illicit data retention.
>> 
>> 
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