[Blindmath] Pascal's Triangle in Braille?

Joseph Lee joseph.lee22590 at gmail.com
Thu Jul 31 11:44:38 UTC 2014


Hi,
Pascal's Triangle describes a pattern for locating factorials, permutations
and combinations. It is arranged like a pyramid, with the first entry being
1. Each level of the triangle describes the following: each row represents
each number (1, 2, ... n), and each column describes the permutations. For
example, if someone says, "what is 5 choose 3," then the person would look
at the fourth column of row six (the top row is zero).
I think the simplest way to represent Pascal's Triangle in braille is not to
use the visual layout; rather, start from the leftmost margin, with each
line being a row from the triangle, with columns separated by a space.
Cheers,
Joseph

-----Original Message-----
From: Blindmath [mailto:blindmath-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Elise
Berkley via Blindmath
Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2014 4:16 AM
To: 'Alexa Schriempf'; 'Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics'
Subject: Re: [Blindmath] Pascal's Triangle in Braille?

Okay.  I am claiming ignorance here.  I am not familiar with Pascal's
triangle and I cannot get a visual of it.  Can someone help me a little bit
here?  Or, if someone has a simple example in braille, I can pay for a copy
in the mail?  This is interesting.  Elise

-----Original Message-----
From: Blindmath [mailto:blindmath-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Alexa
Schriempf via Blindmath
Sent: Tuesday, July 29, 2014 7:15 PM
To: blindmath at nfbnet.org
Subject: [Blindmath] Pascal's Triangle in Braille?

Dear Listers:

Today I made a Braille version of Pascal's triangle for a student. Needless
to say, because I could not adjust the font size of the Braille, and because
our paper is 11 inches wide, I had some issues with recreating it with
Duxbury and our embosser.

Pascal's Triangle is a very specific pattern of numbers, and the orientation
of the numbers is carefully placed in a honeycomb pattern. To make 4 digit
numbers fit in the honeycomb slot of the same size that holds a 1 digit
number, typical images of Pascal's triangle simply use a smaller font size.
This does not work when using Braille of course.

I tried to put this in a table, but the table cells need to be staggered.
In the end, I I simply printed out each row and cut the rows into strips,
taped the strips together where needed, and then glued the whole thing to
cardboard.

However, while this will work for understanding some of the basics, it won't
help where it's necessary to see how the numbers align physically on the
paper because the inability to change the size and spacing of Braille dots
means that I can't fit a four digit number to fit underneath a 2 digit
number.

Surely, this learning object must already exist in Braille someplace?
Please advise.

Thank you so much!
Alexa
--
Alexa Schriempf, Access Tech Consultant
Office for Disability Services
Teaching and Learning with Technology: Accessibility Group Adaptive
Technology Services, University Libraries Penn State
https://sites.psu.edu/aschriempf/ http://equity.psu.edu/ods
http://tlt.its.psu.edu/
http://www.libraries.psu.edu/psul/adaptivetechnologies.html
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