Home  

Random  

Nearby  



Log in  



Settings  



Donate  



About Wikipedia  

Disclaimers  



Wikipedia





Template:Braille cell





Template  

Talk  



Language  

Watch  

View source  





  • Images: {{Braille cell|A|B|C|type=image|size=15px}}⠁ (braille pattern dots-1)⠃ (braille pattern dots-12)⠉ (braille pattern dots-14)
  • All parameters:
  • {{Braille cell|code1|code2|code3|...|lang=|type=|size=|caption=|background=}}

    By default the braille language is English braille (grade 2), and any abstract form ("dots-136").

    Usage overview

    code1, 2, 3, .... Letter definitions to be translated to a braille cell (case insensitive, A=a). Only the first unnamed parameter is evaluated when this template is substituted, and only dot patterns in numeric order are valid input.

    lang for the braille language. Four braille languages are recognised: English (grade 2), French, Japanese and Korean braille. English (grade 2) braille is default so doesn't have to be entered, the other languages should be defined (e.g. lang=Japanese).

    type. Type of braille cell to be shown: 6-dot cell image, 8-dot cell image, in-line text character 6, 6dot, 8, 8dot, image, text. The default is text (inline font character). For Japanese and Korean braille script, entering type=Korean produces illustrative colored braille cells (see Korean braille). These two types are default for their languages.

    size. Width size of the image (inpx) of font-size of the inline text (like %, em, px). Add the unit to the number (e.g. size=20px for 6dot/8dot images, and 10px, 2em, 150% for fontsize).

    caption. A descriptive caption (mouse hover text) for a braille character is added. It can be shortened to the simple definition (caption= (<blank>), and be hidden (caption=no).

    backgroundorbg. Sets the background color. For type=text only. Default is #f4f4f4. Examples:

    Input values

    Possible input: plain text and various braille cell definitions (see below). Up to 20 cells can be indicated in a single call to the template, each dot pattern separated with a pipe character "|". Skipping a code is read as a blank cell (e.g. {{braille cell|A||b|o|o|k introduces a blank cell after "A"). All defined input values will output a single Braille cell.

    Acceptable input values to produce braille cells are of the following types:

    Letters

    Simple English letters - capital or lower case: "A", "c", "X", "W", "z", etc. Valid for 6-dot, 8-dot, text, and Japanese type cells.

    Accented French letters - capital or lower case: "È", "Ö", "å", etc.

    Double letters and words - capital or lower case: "st", "SH", "for", "Th", "ing", etc.

    Japanese letters - Katakana, hiragana, and Japanese diacritics (e.g. "dakuten", "chōon", "-Y-", etc.) are valid input for 6-dot, 8-dot, text, and Japanese cell types, with Romaji valid for Japanese cells only.

    Korean letters - The {{positional Hangul jamo}} are valid input for 6-dot, 8-dot, text, and Korean cell types, with Revised Romanization (X- for initial, -X for final consonants) valid for Korean cells only.

    Other characters

    Numbers - prefixed with a number sign: "#0" (="J"), "#7" (="G"), etc.

    Punctuation - signs or names: "exclamation", ".", "openquote", "bracket", etc.

    Other symbols - "null" or "blank", "accent" or "`", "contraction" or "contr2", "capital", "decimal", "contr3" or "space" (dots 4+5), "correction", "cursive" or "contr1", "number" or "#".

    Notes - For the question mark "?" in French, use lang=French. Otherwise it will produce (default) the English braille. The French "space" is the third English Braille contraction prefix, while English Braille space is "blank" or "null", and French "cursive" is the first English Braille contractions prefix.

    Braille cell definitions (dot numbering)

    8-dot Braille cell dot numbers. Dots 7 and 8 are not found on a 6-dot Braille cell.

    Four options can be used in this Braille cell template to produce a cell, and all are case-insensitive (A=a).

    Note that this cell definition is unrelated to any language (no "A" assigned).

    A braille cell is defined by naming the raised dots. In 6-dot notation there are 64 combinations, in 8-dot notation this number is 256 (including all 6-dot cells). Such a definition is independent of the braille language (there is no connection with a letter A; this is for the Braille language to add).

    Using the cell numbering shown here, one can simply mention the raised dots: say dots-1234 for . The numeric order can be in raising numeric order ("123456"), or in row-by-row order ("142536"), so the same cell is uniquely identified by 1234 or by 1423. A dot pattern in rising numeric order is the only valid input when substituting this template.

    Another identification is the Unicode character, ⠏, that is U+280F BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-1234 (block: Braille Patterns). The block has a mapping from raised dots to character id in the range U+28xx.

    Inversely, a cell can be defined by its Unicode character id: U+280F defines cell with raised dots-1234.

    Braille cell definitions for 1829 Braille cells

    Numbering scheme for 1829 (horizontal bars) braille cells.

    The 1829 Braille standard established the option of a bar across a row in addition to any combination of the two dots. In 1829 notation, there are 125 combinations, including all 64 valid regular 6-dot cell configurations.

    Using the cell numbering shown here, one can simply define the raised rows: A, B, C, AB, AC, BC, or ABC, followed by the raised dots in rows not occupied by a bar ("0" for no dots). The order of the bars and numbers can be in rising order ("ABC123456"), with letters (bars) before numbers (dots), or in row-by-row order ("A14B25C36"), so the same cell is uniquely identified by AC25 or by A25C.

    The 1829 Braille standard is not compatible with the Unicode Braille specification, and neither a text character, nor a Unicode code point will output an 1829 Braille cell.

    Special options

    Two input codes are available to produce special, non-braille output.

    Cell numbering overview

    dot numbers returns the overview of dot numbers 1–8. It can only be type=image:

    Whitespace

    nullorwhitespace produces a true space, not the blank braille cell:

    lang

    Japanese and Korean braille

    Japanese braille and Korean braille have setting options from an earlier version of this template. They can be declared using type=Japanese. Doing so returns colored braillecells for clarification.

    lang= type= shows note
    <not used> <not used> English, 6dot b/w default
    <not used> 6dot 6dot b/w unchanged
    <not used> Korean 6dot colored Korean unchanged (deprecated; use lang=Korean instead)
    <not used> Japanese 6dot colored Japanese unchanged (deprecated; use lang=Japanese instead)
    <not used> 8dot 8dot b/w unchanged
    text character (is always 8dot) unchanged
    Japanese 6dot 6dot b/w new option
    Korean 6dot 6dot b/w new option
    Japanese 8dot 8dot b/w new option
    Korean 8dot 8dot b/w new option

    In general, the language should be entered lang=Japanese. The parameter type then is available as default (colored cells) or enforcing 6dot black/white cells for Japanese or Korean.

    type

    size

    background

    Can be set for text output (not for image output).

    caption

    The cell has a caption (mouse hover text), based on the input. When the template is substituted, no caption is generated.

    Possible errors

    Possible errors that are caught:

    {{Braille cell|xyz}}Error using {{Braille cell}}: input "xyz" not supported.
    {{Braille cell|a|b|c|d|e|f|g|h|i|j|k|l|m|n|o|p|q|r|s|t|u|v|w|x|y|z|type=text}}Error using {{Braille cell}}: maximum input (20 braille characters) exceeded after "t".

    Article pages with a red error message also are listed in Category:Unsupported braille input.

    {{Braille cell|#2|2}}⠃ (braille pattern dots-12)⠂ (braille pattern dots-2).

    This mistake is not caught or noted. The intention of the editor (input is dot-number or decimal number) cannot be deduced.

    Examples

    {{Braille cell|X}}
    {{Braille cell|y dakuten|か|chōon|type=kana}}⠘ (braille pattern dots-45)⠡ (braille pattern dots-16)⠒ (braille pattern dots-25)
    {{Braille cell|h-|ᅡ|ᆫ|type=hangul}}⠚ (braille pattern dots-245)⠣ (braille pattern dots-126)⠒ (braille pattern dots-25)
    {{Braille cell|type=8|X}}⠭ (braille pattern dots-1346)
    {{Braille cell|type=Unicode|size=300%|X}}
    {{Braille cell|size=25|X|text=a small braille X}}
    {{Braille cell|12536}}
    {{Braille cell|type=8|2478}} -=→ ⣊ (braille pattern dots-2478)
    {{subst:Braille cell|type=8|2478}} → ⣊

    Overview

    Technical details

    The parameter name "dot-id" is used to define a braille cell. It is the numbering of the raised dots, like 136 for . The sequence is climbing: 12345678, as is used in the Unicode character name: "Braille pattern dots-136".

    Input is evaluated and processed using these lists:

    Error tracking category:


    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Template:Braille_cell&oldid=1078007240"
     



    Last edited on 19 March 2022, at 10:34  


    Languages

     


    Afrikaans


     / Bân-lâm-gú

    Bikol Central
    Bosanski
    Català
    Ελληνικά
    Esperanto
    فارسی


    Ilokano
    Bahasa Indonesia
    עברית
    Kurdî
    Latviešu

    Bahasa Melayu

    Nederlands

    ି
    Scots
    Shqip
    Simple English
    Српски / srpski
    Tagalog
    ி
     

    Türkçe
    Українська
    اردو
    Tiếng Vit



     

    Wikipedia


    This page was last edited on 19 March 2022, at 10:34 (UTC).

    Content is available under CC BY-SA 4.0 unless otherwise noted.



    Privacy policy

    About Wikipedia

    Disclaimers

    Contact Wikipedia

    Code of Conduct

    Developers

    Statistics

    Cookie statement

    Terms of Use

    Desktop