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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.
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:
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The Unicode block Braille Patterns (U+2800..U+28FF) contains all 256 possible patterns of an 8-dot braille cell, thereby including the complete 6-dot cell range. [3] In Unicode, a braille cell does not have a letter or meaning defined. For example, Unicode does not define U+2817 ⠗ BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-1235 to be "R".
This template is a subst:-able version of the {{braille cell}} template that returns a single plain text unicode character or 8-dot braille cell image. braille dot numbers {{subst:bc subst|pattern|type=image|size=}} pattern is the numbers of the raised dots in numeric order, e.g. 1348 for . Default is no dots (pattern 0). type can be set to ...
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The Gardner–Salinas braille codes are a proposed method of encoding mathematical and scientific notation linearly using braille cells for tactile reading by the visually impaired. The most common form of Gardner–Salinas braille is the 8-cell variety, commonly called GS8. There is also a corresponding 6-cell form called GS6. [1]