[Nfb-science] reading equations

Kevin Fjelsted kfjelsted at gmail.com
Thu May 16 20:59:07 UTC 2013


Is MathType accessible enough that one can convert a MathTyped  doc to Latex via  ScreenReader access?

-Kevin

On May 16, 2013, at 3:52 PM, "Noble,Stephen L." <steve.noble at louisville.edu> wrote:

> Yes, this is certainly true. My reply responded to the original email question, which dealt with reading Microsoft Equation Editor and/or MathType equations within a Word document. Such equation formats are not currently accessible natively in Word. One may of course use other means such as LaTeX expressions within a Word document. Actually, if one knows LaTeX, for instance, one can easily use MathType to toggle back and forth between equation formats and LaTeX.
> 
> Steve Noble
> steve.noble at louisville.edu
> 502-969-3088
> http://louisville.academia.edu/SteveNoble
> 
> ________________________________________
> From: Nfb-science [nfb-science-bounces at nfbnet.org] on behalf of Dr. Denise M Robinson [deniserob at gmail.com]
> Sent: Thursday, May 16, 2013 3:27 PM
> To: NFB Science and Engineering Division List
> Subject: Re: [Nfb-science] reading equations
> 
> There are many ways to write and read math in word and have jaws read
> it....here is a video of just a partial of what my students do...the first
> part is emailing from word and the second part is getting advanced math
> problems to read and to write them---they do very advanced math...actually
> all of it in word--just turn on jaws attributes to read
> 
> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pQVP6dADd3w
> 
> *Dr Denise*
> 
> Denise M. Robinson, TVI, Ph.D.
> CEO, TechVision, LLC
> Specialist in Technology/Training/Teaching for blind/low vision
> 423-573-6413
> 
> On Thu, May 16, 2013 at 1:35 PM, Noble,Stephen L. <
> steve.noble at louisville.edu> wrote:
> 
>> You cannot currently read equations natively within a Word document. I do
>> have a development version of Window-Eyes which will indeed do just that,
>> but it was created for a research project and is not now commercially
>> available. Currently, one has to use MathType and export the Word doc as
>> HTML+MathML, using MathType's "publish to MathPage" function. One cannot
>> save as XML from Word's "save as" menu; one has to use MathType's "publish
>> to MathPage" utility. One that is done, the resulting HTML file will
>> contain MathML for all the math equations, and assuming one has MathPlayer
>> installed and opens the file with Internet Explorer, then JAWS or most
>> other major screen readers will read the math.
>> 
>> Steve Noble
>> steve.noble at louisville.edu
>> 502-969-3088
>> http://louisville.academia.edu/SteveNoble
>> ________________________________________
>> From: Nfb-science [nfb-science-bounces at nfbnet.org] on behalf of Amy Bower
>> [abower at whoi.edu]
>> Sent: Wednesday, May 15, 2013 4:10 PM
>> To: nfb-science at nfbnet.org
>> Cc: 'Bower, Amy'
>> Subject: [Nfb-science] reading equations
>> 
>> Hi All - I'm guessing this question would be better posted to the blind
>> math
>> list serve, but I don't belong to that and I'm hoping some of you will know
>> how to direct me. I apologize in advance if the question has been covered
>> recently or is common knowledge (except to me).
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> I read some information on the Creative Designs web site about accessible
>> math, and I got the impression that is possible for math equations to be
>> read accurately by a screen reader. I'm hoping someone can direct me to a
>> simple primer on how to set everything up to do this. For example, I have a
>> MS Word 2010 document in which the author has inserted many equations using
>> Microsoft Equation Editor, which I think is Mathtype. Do I just save this
>> document as a .xml file? And then what?  I downloaded MathPlay, which seems
>> to be a necessary component, but I don't get  how this all plays together
>> with Jaws (the screen reader I'm using). A step-by-step list of what to do
>> would be most appreciated.
>> 
>> 
>> 
>> Thanks.
>> 
>> Amy B.
>> 
>> 
>> 
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>> 
>> 
>> 
>> _______________________________________________
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> 
> 
> 
> --
> *Dr Denise*
> 
> Denise M. Robinson, TVI, Ph.D.
> CEO, TechVision, LLC
> Specialist in Technology/Training/Teaching for blind/low vision
> 423-573-6413
> 
> Website with hundreds of informational articles & lessons on PC, Office
> products, Mac, iPad/iTools and more, all done with
> keystrokes: www.yourtechvision.com
> 
> "The person who says it cannot be done, shouldn't interrupt the one who is
> doing it." --Chinese Proverb
> 
> Computers are incredibly fast, accurate, and stupid: humans are incredibly
> slow, inaccurate and brilliant; together they are powerful beyond
> imagination.
> --Albert Einstein
> 
> It's kind of fun to do the impossible.
> --Walt Disney
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> 
> 
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