[Blindmath] Scanning Math: location of liblouisxml software

John J. Boyer john at godtouches.org
Sun Apr 11 20:25:34 UTC 2010


I think I sent the following message from the wrong email address. Let's 
hope it goes through this time.

The current link for information on liblouisxml is 
http://www.abilitiessoft.com/liblouisxml.html There is a lot of other 
information on this site about both the translator library, liblouis and 
the braille transcription library liblouisxml There is also a program 
called xml2brl that uses liblouisxml to transcribe text, xml and html 
documents. All the software is free and open source. You can obtain it 
and some useful utilities on the downloads pagge.

John

On Sun, Apr 11, 2010 at 11:08:31AM -0700, Roopakshi Pathania wrote:
> 
> Hi Darlene,
> 
> In most cases the printed handout would have been produced on the computer.
> 
> If the teacher uses Microsoft Word to produce the handout and insert equations, then the student can use MathType to convert Word into a web page with embedded MathML. 
> See this for more information on this step.
> http://www.dessci.com/en/products/MathType/features.htm
> 
> The HTML + MathML can then be converted into Nemeth Braille using Liblouisxml.
> See this guide on Liblouisxml.
> http://www.jjb-software.com/liblouisxml-guide.html
> 
> The teacher could also use LaTeX, a commonly used language for scientific documents to produce the handouts.
> In this case, Sarah has already suggested an option for converting LaTeX into Braille.
> 
> If it comes down to scanning, then InftyReader is the only option for Math content.
> 
> Regards
> --- On Sun, 4/11/10, Darlene Dorr <navydarlene at yahoo.com> wrote:
> 
> > From: Darlene Dorr <navydarlene at yahoo.com>
> > Subject: [Blindmath] Scanning Math
> > To: "Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics" <blindmath at nfbnet.org>
> > Date: Sunday, April 11, 2010, 5:53 PM
> > If a teacher provided a student with
> > math content printed handouts, what options does a Braille
> > reader have to convert? I am trying to ensure a college
> > bound student has the necessary technology and tools to
> > overcome this situation.
> > 
> > The student has Kurzweill scanning software, JAWS, Duxbury,
> > Romeo Pro-50 embosser and a Braille Note. Are there other
> > technologies he should have? Are there easier alternatives?
> > 
> > Any advice appreciated.
> > 
> > R/
> > Darlene 
> > 
> > 
> > ? ? ? 
> > 
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> 
> 
>       
> 
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-- 
John J. Boyer; President, Chief Software Developer
Abilitiessoft, Inc.
http://www.abilitiessoft.com
Madison, Wisconsin USA
Developing software for people with disabilities



-- 
John J. Boyer, Executive Director
GodTouches Digital Ministry, Inc.
http://www.godtouches.org
Madison, Wisconsin, USA
Peace, Love, Service





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