[Blindmath] {Spam?} Re: {Spam?} math type accessibility with jaws screen reader,

Rebecca Maria Carvalho rebecca at xrcvc.org
Mon Feb 27 19:58:50 UTC 2017


Hi,
Regarding point 4 in your email, you mentioned that MathType's equations in Word can be read in Nemeth on Refreshable Braille displays with NVDA + Math Player.
Which Refreshable Braille Display can be used for this?And how would one go about it ?
I have tried reading MathType Equations from Word on the Focus 40 Refreshable Braille Display, but it did not display Nemeth.
We have been looking for the solution to this for a while but have not been able to find any Refreshable Braille Display that displays Nemeth Braille Code.Please do let us know.
Rebecca
Sent from RediffmailNG on Android

From: Neil Soiffer via Blindmath <blindmath at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Mon, 27 Feb 2017 10:33:32 GMT+0530
To: Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics <blindmath at nfbnet.org>
Subject: Re: [Blindmath] {Spam?}  math type accessibility with jaws screen reader,

A few notes and clarifications about MathType:



1.  LaTeX is not the underlying language for MathType -- LaTeX along with

MathML and a few other formats are alternative representations that

MathType supports for import and export.



2. The translator from MathType to LaTeX is somewhat simple and puts in far

more braces than are needed. It's easier to generate that way and legal

LaTeX. It does unfortunately make it harder to read and listen to.



3.  If you type LaTeX and convert it to MathType, MathType will remember

the original LaTeX and preserve it unless you edit the equation in

MathType. So if you start with LaTeX without many braces, convert it to

MathType and convert it back to LaTeX, it will look exactly the way you

typed it.



4.  If you can't see normal math notation, a VERY big advantage of using

Word+MathType+NVDA+MathPlayer when entering LaTeX is that once you convert

the LaTeX to normal math notation, it can be read by NVDA+MathPlayer and

displayed in Nemeth on a refreshible braille display. That's important

because you have no way of knowing if you made a mistake in typing the

LaTeX without getting that feedback. Making occasional mistakes in LaTeX

happens to everyone, so getting feedback via sight, sound, or touch is

really important if you want to make sure others understand what you wrote.



5.  AFAIK, JAWS does not support speaking/brailling math in Word documents.

If that has changed in the last year, please let me and others on the list

know.



I hope that clarifies a few things,



Neil Soiffer









On Sun, Feb 26, 2017 at 1:04 PM, Louis Maher via Blindmath <

blindmath at nfbnet.org> wrote:



> Hi Doug,

>

> I borrow the document I sent the list from another person.  I did not write

> it, and I can't answer questions on its syntax.  I am just starting to

> learn

> Latex and MathType.

>

> I do not know if it matters, but I am a JAWS user.

>

> I was able to turn the equation image into Latex and back to an image by

> using alt+.  When I was looking at the Latex version of the equation, I

> moved the cursor onto the first $ and hit alt+, and the equation turned

> back into an image.  I am using Office 2016, JAWS 18, and MathType 6.9.

>

>

>

>

> Regards

> Louis Maher

> Phone: 713-444-7838

> E-mail: ljmaher at swbell.net

>

> -----Original Message-----

> From: Blindmath [mailto:blindmath-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Doug

> and

> Molly Miron via Blindmath

> Sent: Sunday, February 26, 2017 2:16 PM

> To: Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics

> <blindmath at nfbnet.org>

> Cc: Doug and Molly Miron <mndmrn at hbci.com>

> Subject: [Blindmath] {Spam?} Re: math type accessibility with jaws screen

> reader,

>

> Good day Louis,

>

> I'm new to TeX and LaTeX and found your message very helpful.  I didn't

> know

> that TeX is the underlying language for MathType.  Also, it took me a while

> to discover that alt+ is alt+[backslash] because NVDA doesn't read the

> character unless I single-step through it.  After reading your example

> document, I opened, in current versions of Word, MathType and MathPlayer, a

> document I'd written several years ago inold versions of Word and MathType.

> The alt+ brought out the underlying TeX, but it wouldn't convert back.  In

> your example and my old document, exponents are heavily braced, even when

> there is only one character.  Why is this?  In your e-mail integral example

> it seems you got away with minimal bracing.  The letter "n" seems to be

> used

> as a filler in multi-line equations.  Can yoou recommend a reference for

> math type-setting in TeX or LaTeX?  Thanks.

>

> Regards,

> Doug Miron

>

>

> -----Original Message-----

>     From: Louis Maher via Blindmath

> Sent: Friday, February 24, 2017 7:05 PM

> To: 'Blind Math list for those interested in mathematics'

> Cc: Louis Maher ; 'tolga karatas'

> Subject: Re: [Blindmath] math type accessibility with jaws screen reader,

>

> Hello Tolga,

>

> If you are willing to learn LaTex, MathType is accessible for the blind

> with

> JAWS.  Here is a message I received from Neil Soiffer (I do not have a

> current e-mail address for Neil).  Note that while he talks about NVDA,

> MathTypes works well in JAWS.

>

> I do not think you need MathPlayer in JAWS.

> -----

> "You can use Word+NVDA+MathPlayer+MathType to author and read math if you

> are willing to learn the math component of LaTeX. If you already have a

> document with math in it, then the above combination will work for *reading

> *and navigating the math by speech. If you want to author math, then in

> Word

> you can type in some LaTeX between $ $ and use MathType to convert that

> into

> MathType math (so it looks nice), which can then be spoken and navigated.

> Given that it is easy to make a mistake in LaTeX, hearing the math gives

> you

> a way to know that you have typed it correctly. If you didn't, then you

> convert it back into LaTeX and edit it and listen again.

>

> FYI: changing between LaTeX and vice-versa is done with ""Toggle TeX""

> which

> has the keyboard shortcut alt+. As the name ""Toggle"" implies, alt+ will

> also change the MathType equation back to TeX.

>

> Here is a concrete example, if you want to write ""the integral from 0 to

> 10

> of x times e to the negative 2x power, d x"", you would type into Word:

> $int_0^{10} x e^{-2 x} dx$ alt+

>

> Press left arrow to move before the math to make NVDA read the math to you.

> If you made a mistake, type alt+ and move right to edit the LaTeX.

>

> FYI: when I initially typed the example, I made a common TeX error of not

> putting the ""10"" inside of {}s. Be careful to add braces to any subscript

> or superscript that is more than one character.

>

> Neil Soiffer

> Use insert equations to start entering an equation.

>

> -----

>

> If you are on the image of an equation, you type alt+backslash and the

> equation will be converted to LaTex, and you can read and change it.

>

> I have attached an example file to try this.

>

>

> I am just beginning to learn this.

>

>

>

> Regards

> Louis Maher

> Phone: 713-444-7838

> E-mail: ljmaher at swbell.net

>

> -----Original Message-----

> From: Blindmath [mailto:blindmath-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of tolga

> karatas via Blindmath

> Sent: Friday, February 24, 2017 4:45 PM

> To: blindmath at nfbnet.org

> Cc: tolga karatas <tolga.karatas2014 at gmail.com>

> Subject: [Blindmath] math type accessibility with jaws screen reader,

>

> Dear Sir/madam,

>

> I am a visually impaired studying a  degree in BSC Business Information

> technology:

>

> I would like to use Math Type with a screen reader called Jaws, but jaws

> isn't user friendly with math type due to LaTEX not being user friendly

> either, how can I over come this challenge please? I really want to use

> math

> type with Jaws Screen reader, however, the accessibility is not their.

>

> Can someone advise me as to how I can solve this problem/challenge please?

>

>

>

>

> Yours Faithfully,

>

>

>

>

> Tolga Karatas

>

> I am a blind student studying BSC Business Information Technology.

>

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>

>

>

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