[nfbcs] LaTeX and Accessible Documents

Aaron Cannon cannona at fireantproductions.com
Tue Dec 16 14:36:15 UTC 2014


I believe providing the sources is the best option. That's what I would prefer.

Aaron

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> On Dec 15, 2014, at 23:18, Joseph C. Lininger via nfbcs <nfbcs at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> 
> Good evening ladies and gentlemen,
> I am currently working on a free cryptography library called FCL. Part of the materials generated from this project are a set of english descriptions for the ciphers, block cipher modes, hash functions, etc. I plan to distribute these with the project, and I might compile them together and distribute them as documents on my web site or something like that.
> 
> Having run into the problem of accessibility of mathematical and other tehcnical material first hand, I had hoped to make these materials accessible. I used the LaTeX type setting system to write these documents. I could simply provide the LaTeX source as an option since the PDF's are not particularly accessible, or I could do something else if people have suggestions on something that might be better. Does anyone have any ideas as to how I could make a more accessible end-product from my LaTeX sources? This information would also be useful to me for situations where I want to share something like an academic paper I wrote with my blind friends, as I use LaTeX for those as well.
> 
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