RE: Braille & Lime

2002-12-23 Thread Ralph Little
om: Han-Wen Nienhuys [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: 20 December 2002 17:24 To: Ralph Little Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' Subject: RE: Braille & Lime [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > Spacing is not significant to the extent that it is in ordinary notation, > and the music is encoded i

RE: Braille & Lime

2002-12-20 Thread Han-Wen Nienhuys
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > Spacing is not significant to the extent that it is in ordinary notation, > and the music is encoded into simply a list of Braille symbols, as spacing > is a lot less significant to a blind reader. OK, but how is polyphonic music handled? -- Han-Wen Nienhuys |

RE: Braille & Lime

2002-12-20 Thread Ralph Little
estion and Mr. Guery is going to get back to me about it. Regards, Ralph -Original Message- From: Han-Wen Nienhuys [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] Sent: 19 December 2002 22:43 To: Ralph Little Cc: '[EMAIL PROTECTED]' Subject: Braille & Lime [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > Ot

Braille & Lime

2002-12-19 Thread Han-Wen Nienhuys
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > Otherwise, it seems to me that with the aid of a suitable font, another > engraver might do the trick for this. > The Braille Music is encoded as a Braille character stream not too disimilar > to standard music notation so that it could be another output option not > unl

Braille & Lime

2002-12-19 Thread Ralph Little
Hi, I have had a look at Braille Music and *GOSH* it's a bit complicated! However, undaunted I'm gonna give it a go! There is plenty of documentation on it out there on the Internet. I have a few questions which you guys might be able to help with: Firstly, does anybody know if it is possible to