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Mountbatten Brailler

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In punctuation , a word divider is a form of glyph which separates written words . In languages which use the Latin , Cyrillic , and Arabic alphabets , as well as other scripts of Europe and West Asia, the word divider is a blank space , or whitespace . This convention is spreading, along with other aspects of European punctuation, to Asia and Africa, where words are usually written without word separation.

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54-654: The Mountbatten Brailler is an electronic machine used to type braille on braille paper. It uses the traditional "braille typewriter keyboard" of the Perkins Brailler with modern technology, giving it a number of additional features such as word processing, audio feedback and embossing . The machine was pioneered and developed at the United Kingdom 's Royal National College for the Blind in Hereford by Ernest Bate. Initially

108-400: A braille embosser (printer) or a refreshable braille display (screen). Braille has been extended to an 8-dot code , particularly for use with braille embossers and refreshable braille displays. In 8-dot braille the additional dots are added at the bottom of the cell, giving a matrix 4 dots high by 2 dots wide. The additional dots are given the numbers 7 (for the lower-left dot) and 8 (for

162-566: A slate and stylus , a braille writer , an electronic braille notetaker or with the use of a computer connected to a braille embosser . Braille is named after its creator, Louis Braille , a Frenchman who lost his sight as a result of a childhood accident. In 1824, at the age of fifteen, he developed the braille code based on the French alphabet as an improvement on night writing . He published his system, which subsequently included musical notation , in 1829. The second revision, published in 1837,

216-645: A vowel , so-called matres lectionis ). Without some form of visible word dividers, parsing a text into its separate words would have been a puzzle. With the introduction of letters representing vowels in the Greek alphabet , the need for inter-word separation lessened. The earliest Greek inscriptions used interpuncts, as was common in the writing systems which preceded it, but soon the practice of scriptio continua , continuous writing in which all words ran together without separation became common. Alphabetic writing without inter-word separation, known as scriptio continua ,

270-526: A word space . Dot configurations can be used to represent a letter, digit, punctuation mark, or even a word. Early braille education is crucial to literacy, education and employment among the blind. Despite the evolution of new technologies, including screen reader software that reads information aloud, braille provides blind people with access to spelling, punctuation and other aspects of written language less accessible through audio alone. While some have suggested that audio-based technologies will decrease

324-459: A greater number of symbols. (See Gardner–Salinas braille codes .) Luxembourgish Braille has adopted eight-dot cells for general use; for example, accented letters take the unaccented versions plus dot 8. Braille was the first writing system with binary encoding . The system as devised by Braille consists of two parts: Within an individual cell, the dot positions are arranged in two columns of three positions. A raised dot can appear in any of

378-405: A maximum of 42 cells per line (its margins are adjustable), and typical paper allows 25 lines per page. A large interlining Stainsby has 36 cells per line and 18 lines per page. An A4-sized Marburg braille frame, which allows interpoint braille (dots on both sides of the page, offset so they do not interfere with each other), has 30 cells per line and 27 lines per page. A Braille writing machine

432-611: A space-saving mechanism; and grade 3  – various non-standardized personal stenographies that are less commonly used. In addition to braille text (letters, punctuation, contractions), it is also possible to create embossed illustrations and graphs, with the lines either solid or made of series of dots, arrows, and bullets that are larger than braille dots. A full braille cell includes six raised dots arranged in two columns, each column having three dots. The dot positions are identified by numbers from one to six. There are 64 possible combinations, including no dots at all for

486-601: A system much more like shorthand. Today, there are braille codes for over 133 languages. In English, some variations in the braille codes have traditionally existed among English-speaking countries. In 1991, work to standardize the braille codes used in the English-speaking world began. Unified English Braille (UEB) has been adopted in all seven member countries of the International Council on English Braille (ICEB) as well as Nigeria. For blind readers, braille

540-469: A text interfered with following the alignment of the letters, and consequently made texts more difficult to read than Braille's more arbitrary letter assignment. Finally, there are braille scripts that do not order the codes numerically at all, such as Japanese Braille and Korean Braille , which are based on more abstract principles of syllable composition. Texts are sometimes written in a script of eight dots per cell rather than six, enabling them to encode

594-502: A vertical line, and in manuscripts a single (·), double (:), or triple (⫶) interpunct (dot) was used to divide words. This practice was found in Phoenician , Aramaic , Hebrew , Greek , and Latin , and continues today with Ethiopic , though there whitespace is gaining ground. The early alphabetic writing systems, such as the Phoenician alphabet , had only signs for consonants (although some signs for consonants could also stand for

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648-399: A word and a character were almost the same thing, so that word dividers would have been superfluous. Although Modern Mandarin has numerous polysyllabic words, and each syllable is written with a distinct character, the conceptual link between character and word or at least morpheme remains strong, and no need is felt for word separation apart from what characters already provide. This link

702-465: Is a Return key rather than a carriage return lever. The rollers that hold and advance the paper have grooves designed to avoid crushing the raised dots the brailler creates. In addition to the traditional keyboard, the Mountbatten has several other features. These include memory which allows braille text files to be stored in much the same way as is done with a word processor , speech feedback allowing

756-544: Is a typewriter with six keys that allows the user to write braille on a regular hard copy page. The first Braille typewriter to gain general acceptance was invented by Frank Haven Hall (Superintendent of the Illinois School for the Blind ), and was presented to the public in 1892. The Stainsby Brailler, developed by Henry Stainsby in 1903, is a mechanical writer with a sliding carriage that moves over an aluminium plate as it embosses Braille characters. An improved version

810-580: Is also found in the Vietnamese language ; however, in the Vietnamese alphabet , virtually all syllables are separated by spaces, whether or not they form word boundaries. Space is the most common word divider, especially in Latin script . Ancient inscribed and cuneiform scripts such as Anatolian hieroglyphs frequently used short vertical lines to separate words, as did Linear B . In manuscripts, vertical lines were more commonly used for larger breaks, equivalent to

864-517: Is an independent writing system, rather than a code of printed orthography. Braille is derived from the Latin alphabet, albeit indirectly. In Braille's original system, the dot patterns were assigned to letters according to their position within the alphabetic order of the French alphabet of the time, with accented letters and w sorted at the end. Unlike print, which consists of mostly arbitrary symbols,

918-530: Is dot 5, which combines with the first letter of words. With the letter ⠍ m , the resulting word is ⠐ ⠍ mother . There are also ligatures ("contracted" letters), which are single letters in braille but correspond to more than one letter in print. The letter ⠯ and , for example, is used to write words with the sequence a-n-d in them, such as ⠛ ⠗ ⠯ grand . Most braille embossers support between 34 and 40 cells per line, and 25 lines per page. A manually operated Perkins braille typewriter supports

972-399: Is extended by adding the decade dots, whereas in the fifth decade it is extended by shifting it downward. Originally there had been nine decades. The fifth through ninth used dashes as well as dots, but they proved to be impractical to distinguish by touch under normal conditions and were soon abandoned. From the beginning, these additional decades could be substituted with what we now know as

1026-555: Is read as capital 'A', and ⠼ ⠁ as the digit '1'. Basic punctuation marks in English Braille include: ⠦ is both the question mark and the opening quotation mark. Its reading depends on whether it occurs before a word or after. ⠶ is used for both opening and closing parentheses. Its placement relative to spaces and other characters determines its interpretation. Punctuation varies from language to language. For example, French Braille uses ⠢ for its question mark and swaps

1080-453: The slate and stylus is a portable writing tool, much like the pen and paper for the sighted. Errors can be erased using a braille eraser or can be overwritten with all six dots ( ⠿ ). Interpoint refers to braille printing that is offset, so that the paper can be embossed on both sides, with the dots on one side appearing between the divots that form the dots on the other. Using a computer or other electronic device, Braille may be produced with

1134-422: The French order of the decade was u v x y z ç é à è ù ( ⠥ ⠧ ⠭ ⠽ ⠵ ⠯ ⠿ ⠷ ⠮ ⠾ ). The next ten letters, ending in w , are the same again, except that for this series position 6 (purple dot in the bottom right corner of the cell in the table above) is used without a dot at position 3. In French braille these are the letters â ê î ô û ë ï ü œ w ( ⠡ ⠣ ⠩ ⠹ ⠱ ⠫ ⠻ ⠳ ⠪ ⠺ ). W had been tacked onto

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1188-419: The Latin comma and period. This was the case for Biblical Hebrew (the paseq ) and continues with many Indic scripts today (the danda ). As noted above, the single and double interpunct were used in manuscripts (on paper) throughout the ancient world. For example, Ethiopic inscriptions used a vertical line, whereas manuscripts used double dots (፡) resembling a colon. The latter practice continues today, though

1242-621: The Mountbatten Writer Plus, the Mountbatten Pro, and the Mountbatten Learning System. Braille Braille ( / ˈ b r eɪ l / BRAYL , French: [bʁɑj] ) is a tactile writing system used by people who are visually impaired . It can be read either on embossed paper or by using refreshable braille displays that connect to computers and smartphone devices. Braille can be written using

1296-502: The Mountbatten was manufactured in Australia . On January 1, 2010, manufacture of the Mountbatten was taken over by Polish company Harpo Sp. z o. o. The Mountbatten was developed after Lord Mountbatten left a bequest in his will for the development of a modern, low cost, portable brailler. It has been available since 1991. Like the Perkins, the Mountbatten has a key corresponding to each of

1350-465: The addition of a dot at position 3 (red dots in the bottom left corners of the cells in the table below): ⠅ ⠇ ⠍ ⠝ ⠕ ⠏ ⠟ ⠗ ⠎ ⠞ : The next ten letters (the next " decade ") are the same again, but with dots also at both position 3 and position 6 (green dots in the bottom rows of the cells in the table above). Here w was left out as it was not part of the official French alphabet in Braille's time;

1404-401: The alphabet – thus the code was unable to render the orthography of the words. Second, the 12-dot symbols could not easily fit beneath the pad of the reading finger. This required the reading finger to move in order to perceive the whole symbol, which slowed the reading process. (This was because Barbier's system was based only on the number of dots in each of two 6-dot columns, not

1458-460: The braille alphabet follows a logical sequence. The first ten letters of the alphabet, a – j , use the upper four dot positions: ⠁ ⠃ ⠉ ⠙ ⠑ ⠋ ⠛ ⠓ ⠊ ⠚ (black dots in the table below). These stand for the ten digits 1 – 9 and 0 in an alphabetic numeral system similar to Greek numerals (as well as derivations of it, including Hebrew numerals , Cyrillic numerals , Abjad numerals , also Hebrew gematria and Greek isopsephy ). Though

1512-546: The braille letters according to the sort order of the print alphabet being transcribed; and reassigning the letters to improve the efficiency of writing in braille. Under international consensus, most braille alphabets follow the French sorting order for the 26 letters of the basic Latin alphabet , and there have been attempts at unifying the letters beyond these 26 (see international braille ), though differences remain, for example, in German Braille . This unification avoids

1566-540: The chaos of each nation reordering the braille code to match the sorting order of its print alphabet, as happened in Algerian Braille , where braille codes were numerically reassigned to match the order of the Arabic alphabet and bear little relation to the values used in other countries (compare modern Arabic Braille , which uses the French sorting order), and as happened in an early American version of English Braille, where

1620-399: The dots are assigned in no obvious order, the cells with the fewest dots are assigned to the first three letters (and lowest digits), abc = 123 ( ⠁ ⠃ ⠉ ), and to the three vowels in this part of the alphabet, aei ( ⠁ ⠑ ⠊ ), whereas the even digits 4 , 6 , 8 , 0 ( ⠙ ⠋ ⠓ ⠚ ) are right angles. The next ten letters, k – t , are identical to a – j respectively, apart from

1674-469: The end of 39 letters of the French alphabet to accommodate English. The a – j series shifted down by one dot space ( ⠂ ⠆ ⠒ ⠲ ⠢ ⠖ ⠶ ⠦ ⠔ ⠴ ) is used for punctuation. Letters a ⠁ and c ⠉ , which only use dots in the top row, were shifted two places for the apostrophe and hyphen: ⠄ ⠤ . (These are also the decade diacritics, on the left in the table below, of the second and third decade.) In addition, there are ten patterns that are based on

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1728-468: The first braille translator written in a portable programming language. DOTSYS III was developed for the Atlanta Public Schools as a public domain program. Word space In character encoding , word segmentation depends on which characters are defined as word dividers. In Ancient Egyptian , determinatives may have been used as much to demarcate word boundaries as to disambiguate

1782-462: The first two letters ( ⠁ ⠃ ) with their dots shifted to the right; these were assigned to non-French letters ( ì ä ò ⠌ ⠜ ⠬ ), or serve non-letter functions: ⠈ (superscript; in English the accent mark), ⠘ (currency prefix), ⠨ (capital, in English the decimal point ), ⠼ ( number sign ), ⠸ (emphasis mark), ⠐ (symbol prefix). The first four decades are similar in that the numeric sequence

1836-507: The left column and at the top of the right column: that is, the letter ⠍ m . The lines of horizontal braille text are separated by a space, much like visible printed text, so that the dots of one line can be differentiated from the braille text above and below. Different assignments of braille codes (or code pages ) are used to map the character sets of different printed scripts to the six-bit cells. Braille assignments have also been created for mathematical and musical notation. However, because

1890-443: The letters w , x , y , z were reassigned to match English alphabetical order. A convention sometimes seen for letters beyond the basic 26 is to exploit the physical symmetry of braille patterns iconically, for example, by assigning a reversed n to ñ or an inverted s to sh . (See Hungarian Braille and Bharati Braille , which do this to some extent.) A third principle was to assign braille codes according to frequency, with

1944-514: The lower-right dot). Eight-dot braille has the advantages that the casing of each letter is coded in the cell and that every printable ASCII character can be encoded in a single cell. All 256 (2 ) possible combinations of 8 dots are encoded by the Unicode standard. Braille with six dots is frequently stored as Braille ASCII . The first 25 braille letters, up through the first half of the 3rd decade, transcribe a–z (skipping w ). In English Braille,

1998-408: The need for braille, technological advancements such as braille displays have continued to make braille more accessible and available. Braille users highlight that braille remains as essential as print is to the sighted. ⠏ ⠗ ⠑ ⠍ ⠊ ⠑ ⠗ Braille was based on a tactile code , now known as night writing , developed by Charles Barbier . (The name "night writing" was later given to it when it

2052-481: The number sign ( ⠼ ) applied to the earlier decades, though that only caught on for the digits (the old 5th decade being replaced by ⠼ applied to the 1st decade). The dash occupying the top row of the original sixth decade was simply omitted, producing the modern fifth decade. (See 1829 braille .) Historically, there have been three principles in assigning the values of a linear script (print) to Braille: Using Louis Braille's original French letter values; reassigning

2106-399: The on-screen braille input keyboard, to type braille symbols on to their device by placing their fingers on to the screen according to the dot configuration of the symbols they wish to form. These symbols are automatically translated into print on the screen. The different tools that exist for writing braille allow the braille user to select the method that is best for a given task. For example,

2160-445: The pattern of the dots.) Third, the code did not include symbols for numerals or punctuation. Braille's solution was to use 6-dot cells and to assign a specific pattern to each letter of the alphabet. Braille also developed symbols for representing numerals and punctuation. At first, braille was a one-to-one transliteration of the French alphabet, but soon various abbreviations (contractions) and even logograms were developed, creating

2214-537: The quotation marks and parentheses (to ⠶ and ⠦ ⠴ ); it uses ( ⠲ ) for both the period and the decimal point, and the English decimal point ( ⠨ ) to mark capitalization. Braille contractions are words and affixes that are shortened so that they take up fewer cells. In English Braille, for example, the word afternoon is written with just three letters, ⠁ ⠋ ⠝ ⟨afn⟩ , much like stenoscript . There are also several abbreviation marks that create what are effectively logograms . The most common of these

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2268-417: The rest of that decade is rounded out with the ligatures and, for, of, the, and with . Omitting dot 3 from these forms the 4th decade, the ligatures ch, gh, sh, th, wh, ed, er, ou, ow and the letter w . (See English Braille .) Various formatting marks affect the values of the letters that follow them. They have no direct equivalent in print. The most important in English Braille are: That is, ⠠ ⠁

2322-516: The semantics of words. Rarely in Assyrian cuneiform , but commonly in the later cuneiform Ugaritic alphabet , a vertical stroke 𒑰 was used to separate words. In Old Persian cuneiform , a diagonally sloping wedge 𐏐 was used. As the alphabet spread throughout the ancient world, words were often run together without division, and this practice remains or remained until recently in much of South and Southeast Asia. However, not infrequently in inscriptions

2376-542: The simplest patterns (quickest ones to write with a stylus) assigned to the most frequent letters of the alphabet. Such frequency-based alphabets were used in Germany and the United States in the 19th century (see American Braille ), but with the invention of the braille typewriter their advantage disappeared, and none are attested in modern use – they had the disadvantage that the resulting small number of dots in

2430-401: The six dots of the braille code. By simultaneously pressing different combinations of the six keys, users can create any of the characters in the braille code. In addition to these six keys, the Mountbatten has a space key, a backspace key, and a new line key. Like a manual typewriter , it has a knob to advance paper through the machine, although unlike the Perkins the bar does not move. There

2484-414: The six positions, producing 64 (2 ) possible patterns, including one in which there are no raised dots. For reference purposes, a pattern is commonly described by listing the positions where dots are raised, the positions being universally numbered, from top to bottom, as 1 to 3 on the left and 4 to 6 on the right. For example, dot pattern 1-3-4 describes a cell with three dots raised, at the top and bottom in

2538-415: The six-dot braille cell allows only 64 (2 ) patterns, including space, the characters of a braille script commonly have multiple values, depending on their context. That is, character mapping between print and braille is not one-to-one. For example, the character ⠙ corresponds in print to both the letter d and the digit 4 . In addition to simple encoding, many braille alphabets use contractions to reduce

2592-404: The size of braille texts and to increase reading speed. (See Contracted braille .) Braille may be produced by hand using a slate and stylus in which each dot is created from the back of the page, writing in mirror image, or it may be produced on a braille typewriter or Perkins Brailler , or an electronic Brailler or braille notetaker. Braille users with access to smartphones may also activate

2646-516: The space is making inroads. Classical Latin used the interpunct in both paper manuscripts and stone inscriptions. Ancient Greek orthography used between two and five dots as word separators, as well as the hypodiastole . In the modern Hebrew and Arabic alphabets , some letters have distinct forms at the ends and/or beginnings of words. This demarcation is used in addition to spacing. The Nastaʿlīq form of Islamic calligraphy uses vertical arrangement to separate words. The beginning of each word

2700-422: The user to listen to the text they have just typed or from files, and forward and back translation between text and braille. The Mountbatten can be connected to a printer allowing files to be printed as text, while a regular PC keyboard can be connected to the Mountbatten enabling text to be produced as contracted or uncontracted braille. There are several models of the Mountbatten; the basic Mountbatten Writer,

2754-454: Was considered as a means for soldiers to communicate silently at night and without a light source, but Barbier's writings do not use this term and suggest that it was originally designed as a simpler form of writing and for the visually impaired.) In Barbier's system, sets of 12 embossed dots were used to encode 36 different sounds. Braille identified three major defects of the code: first, the symbols represented phonetic sounds and not letters of

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2808-691: Was introduced around 1933. In 1951 David Abraham, a woodworking teacher at the Perkins School for the Blind , produced a more advanced Braille typewriter, the Perkins Brailler . Braille printers or embossers were produced in the 1950s. In 1960 Robert Mann, a teacher in MIT, wrote DOTSYS , a software that allowed automatic braille translation , and another group created an embossing device called "M.I.T. Braillemboss". The Mitre Corporation team of Robert Gildea, Jonathan Millen, Reid Gerhart and Joseph Sullivan (now president of Duxbury Systems) developed DOTSYS III,

2862-744: Was the first binary form of writing developed in the modern era. Braille characters are formed using a combination of six raised dots arranged in a 3 × 2 matrix, called the braille cell. The number and arrangement of these dots distinguishes one character from another. Since the various braille alphabets originated as transcription codes for printed writing, the mappings (sets of character designations) vary from language to language, and even within one; in English braille there are three levels: uncontracted  – a letter-by-letter transcription used for basic literacy; contracted  – an addition of abbreviations and contractions used as

2916-769: Was used in Ancient Egyptian. It appeared in Post-classical Latin after several centuries of the use of the interpunct. Traditionally, scriptio continua was used for the Indic alphabets of South and Southeast Asia and hangul of Korea, but spacing is now used with hangul and increasingly with the Indic alphabets. Today Chinese and Japanese are the most widely used scripts consistently written without punctuation to separate words, though other scripts such as Thai and Lao also follow this writing convention. In Classical Chinese,

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