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The number sign is repeated after a slash that is not used as a fraction bar (like model number 15/07). [24] For example, 1 ⁄ 20 (one twentieth) is ⠼ ⠁ ⠌ ⠃ ⠚ , but 20/20 [vision] is ⠼ ⠃ ⠚ ⠌ ⠼ ⠃ ⠚ . The braille number sign has no equivalent in print. It is sometimes transcribed as # .
BRAILLE PATTERN DOTS-12345678: Dot numbers available ... Official Unicode Consortium code chart (PDF) ... and this tends to print better. Some braille fonts do not ...
Download as PDF; Printable version ... Unicode chart Braille Patterns}} provides a list of Unicode code points in the Braille Patterns block. Usage
Braille assignments have also been created for mathematical and musical notation. However, because the six-dot braille cell allows only 64 (2 6) 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.
The Braille pattern dots-3456 ( ⠼) is a 6-dot braille cell with the top right, middle right, and both bottom dots raised, or an 8-dot braille cell with the top right, upper-middle right, and both lower-middle dots raised. It is represented by the Unicode code point U+283c, and in Braille ASCII with a number sign: #.
Unified English Braille is designed to be readily understood by people familiar with the literary braille (used in standard prose writing), while also including support for specialized math and science symbols, computer-related symbols (the @ sign [1] as well as more specialised programming-language syntax), foreign alphabets, and visual ...
The Braille pattern dots-156 ( ⠱) is a 6-dot braille cell with the upper left, and middle and bottom right dots raised, or an 8-dot braille cell with the upper left, and upper-middle and lower-middle right dots raised. It is represented by the Unicode code point U+2831, and in Braille ASCII with a colon: ":".
An early braille chart, displaying the numeric order of the characters. Braille arranged his characters in decades (groups of ten), and assigned the 25 letters of the French alphabet to them in order. The characters beyond the first 25 are the principal source of variation today.