On Sep 30, 2019, at 10:25 AM, Laura Koester <lkoester@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
There is also spatial layout in UEB, and you turn numeric passage mode on (with
2 number signs) and off with the numeric passage termination sign (number sign,
dot 3). I don’t believe you would use Nemeth with UEB.
Laura Koester, TVI/COMS
MPS
Sent from my iPhone
On Sep 30, 2019, at 12:49 PM, Scherer, David <David.Scherer@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
You should follow print. There may be a reason the equation is vertical and
changing it to horizontal may change the context of the equation/lesson. Rule
XXIV of the Nemeth Code shows how to write spatial arrangements of equations.
David Scherer
Braille Transcriber
Washoe County School District
Reno, NV
Literacy is for everyone.
From: duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <duxuser-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on behalf
of Leah Swenson <leahshielyswenson@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, September 26, 2019 10:30 AM
To: duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <duxuser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: cheri.godfrey@xxxxxxxxxx <cheri.godfrey@xxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [duxuser] Re: Simple Equations Nemeth in a UEB Context
Thank you, Don.
Leah Shiely Swenson
740 Mississippi River Blvd S 3F
Saint Paul, MN 55116
651-238-7896
On Thu, Sep 26, 2019 at 12:28 PM Donald Winiecki <dwiniecki@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
In all forms of braille maths I know of (e.g., Nemeth, UEB maths) expressions
are represented one dimensionally -- as a single sequence of symbols. A large
maths expression can easily take up more than one line in braille.
_don
On Thu, Sep 26, 2019 at 9:24 AM Leah Swenson <leahshielyswenson@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Hello,
If a simple equation is vertical in print, does the Nemeth in UEB context
require the simple equation to be horizontal?
Leah Shiely Swenson
740 Mississippi River Blvd S 3F
Saint Paul, MN 55116
651-238-7896