View file File name : lt.ttb Content :############################################################################### # BRLTTY - A background process providing access to the console screen (when in # text mode) for a blind person using a refreshable braille display. # # Copyright (C) 1995-2018 by The BRLTTY Developers. # # BRLTTY comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. # # This is free software, placed under the terms of the # GNU Lesser General Public License, as published by the Free Software # Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any # later version. Please see the file LICENSE-LGPL for details. # # Web Page: http://brltty.com/ # # This software is maintained by Dave Mielke <dave@mielke.cc>. ############################################################################### # BRLTTY Text Table - Lituanian # # Copyright (C) 2017 Rimas Kudelis <rq@akl.lt> # # The Lithuanian 8-dot Braille writing system is described in a decree of the Minister of # Social Security and Labor, called "Dėl vieningos aštuonių taškų Brailio rašto sistemos # naudojimo tvarkos aprašo patvirtinimo", which is in effect since 2011-04-13. Document # number is A1-183. At the time of writing this file, the document was accessible at # https://www.e-tar.lt/portal/lt/legalAct/TAR.443D667CA047 . # The document is referred to as "the standard" below. # # The standard maps ISO-8859-13 character set to 8-dot Braille writing system. However, # even though it defines different mappings for literary and computer braille modes, it # doesn't seem like the authors had a good understanding of why these two modes exist # and how they differ. Furthermore, the standard contains a few errors (incorrectly named # characters as well as mapping conflicts). I would say it needs further improvements. # # This file is based on the standard, but does not exactly follow it. Some standard # definitions are commented out, some changed, and some extra ones are added. # # This table is based on the respective liblouis table. ### ### LETTERS ### # Standard representations for the letters of the Latin alphabet include ltr-latin.tti # Lowercase accented letters char \u0105 (1 6 ) # ⠡ ą [LATIN SMALL LETTER A WITH OGONEK] char \u010D (1 4 6 ) # ⠩ č [LATIN SMALL LETTER C WITH CARON] char \u0119 (1 56 ) # ⠱ ę [LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH OGONEK] char \u0117 ( 345 ) # ⠜ ė [LATIN SMALL LETTER E WITH DOT ABOVE] char \u012F ( 2 4 6 ) # ⠪ į [LATIN SMALL LETTER I WITH OGONEK] char \u0161 ( 234 6 ) # ⠮ š [LATIN SMALL LETTER S WITH CARON] char \u0173 ( 34 6 ) # ⠬ ų [LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH OGONEK] char \u016B (12 56 ) # ⠳ ū [LATIN SMALL LETTER U WITH MACRON] char \u017E (12 6 ) # ⠣ ž [LATIN SMALL LETTER Z WITH MACRON] # Uppercase accented letters char \u0104 (1 67 ) # ⡡ Ą [LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A WITH OGONEK] char \u010C (1 4 67 ) # ⡩ Č [LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C WITH CARON] char \u0118 (1 567 ) # ⡱ Ę [LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH OGONEK] char \u0116 ( 345 7 ) # ⡜ Ė [LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E WITH DOT ABOVE] char \u012E ( 2 4 67 ) # ⡪ Į [LATIN CAPITAL LETTER I WITH OGONEK] char \u0160 ( 234 67 ) # ⡮ Š [LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S WITH CARON] char \u0172 ( 34 67 ) # ⡬ Ų [LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH OGONEK] char \u016A (12 567 ) # ⡳ Ū [LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U WITH MACRON] char \u017D (12 67 ) # ⡣ Ž [LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z WITH CARON] ### ### DIGITS ### # Digits 0-9 are represented by the letters j,a-i with dot 8 added include num-dot8.tti ### ### PUNCTUATION ### char \x2C ( 2 ) # ⠂ , [COMMA] char \x2E ( 2 56 ) # ⠲ . [FULL STOP] char \x3F ( 2 6 ) # ⠢ ? [QUESTION MARK] char \x21 ( 23 5 ) # ⠖ ! [EXCLAMATION MARK] char \x3A ( 2 5 ) # ⠒ : [COLON] char \x3B ( 23 ) # ⠆ ; [SEMICOLON] char \x22 ( 4 ) # ⠈ " [QUOTATION MARK] char \x27 ( 3 ) # ⠄ ' [APOSTROPHE] # The following character is defined as 134568 in the standard, but that is hardly useful. # According to Unicode, it is the preferred character to use for apostrophe, hence # defining it as one here. alias \u2019 \x27 # ’ [RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK] char \x28 ( 23 567 ) # ⡶ ( [LEFT PARENTHESIS] char \x29 ( 23 56 8) # ⢶ ) [RIGHT PARENTHESIS] char \x5B (123 56 ) # ⠷ [ LEFT SQUARE BRACKET char \x5D ( 23456 ) # ⠾ ] RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET char \x7B ( 2 4 678) # ⣪ { LEFT CURLY BRACKET char \x7D (1 3 5 78) # ⣕ } RIGHT CURLY BRACKET char \x2D ( 3 6 ) # ⠤ - [HYPHEN-MINUS] # Soft hyphen is defined as 368 in the standard. alias \xAD \x2D # [SOFT HYPHEN] # The following characters are not defined in the standard. alias \u2010 \x2D # ‐ [HYPHEN] alias \u2011 \x2D # ‑ [NON-BREAKING HYPHEN] alias \u2012 \x2D # ‒ [FIGURE DASH] alias \u2013 \x2D # – [EN DASH] alias \u2014 \x2D # — [EM DASH] alias \u2015 \x2D # ― [HORIZONTAL BAR] # These are the typographically correct quotes in Lithuanian texts. char \u201E ( 23 67 ) # ⡦ „ [DOUBLE LOW-9 QUOTATION MARK] char \u201C ( 3 567 ) # ⡴ “ [LEFT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK] # The following characters are defined in the standard, because they exist in ISO-8859-13 # character set, even though they should not be used in Lithuanian texts. char \u201D ( 3 67 ) # ⡤ ” [RIGHT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK] char \xAB ( 5678) # ⣰ « [LEFT-POINTING DOUBLE ANGLE QUOTATION MARK] char \xBB ( 45 78) # ⣘ » [RIGHT-POINTING DOUBLE ANGLE QUOTATION MARK] ### ### MATHEMATICAL SYMBOLS ### char \x2B ( 23 5 8) # ⢖ + [PLUS SIGN] # Real minus is not defined in the standard. alias \u2212 \x2D # − [MINUS SIGN] char \x3C ( 2 4 6 8) # ⢪ < [LESS-THAN SIGN] char \x3D ( 23 56 ) # ⠶ = [EQUALS SIGN] char \x3E (1 3 5 8) # ⢕ > [GREATER-THAN SIGN] char \xB1 ( 23 5 78) # ⣖ ± [PLUS-MINUS SIGN] char \xD7 ( 234 8) # ⢎ × MULTIPLICATION SIGN] char \xF7 (12 5678) # ⣳ ÷ [DIVISION SIGN] ### ### OTHER CHARACTERS ### char \x23 ( 3456 ) # ⠼ # [NUMBER SIGN] char \x24 ( 4 6 ) # ⠨ $ [DOLLAR SIGN] char \x25 (123456 ) # ⠿ % [PERCENT SIGN] char \x26 (1234 6 ) # ⠯ & [AMPERSAND] char \x2A ( 3 5 ) # ⠔ * [ASTERISK] char \x2F ( 34 ) # ⠌ / [SOLIDUS] char \x40 ( 345 78) # ⣜ @ [COMMERCIAL AT] char \x5C ( 34 7 ) # ⡌ \ [REVERSE SOLIDUS] char \x5E ( 2 56 8) # ⢲ ^ [CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT] char \x5F ( 4567 ) # ⡸ _ [LOW LINE] char \x7C ( 456 ) # ⠸ | [VERTICAL LINE] char \xA6 (1 456 ) # ⠹ ¦ [BROKEN BAR] char \xA7 ( 34 6 8) # ⢬ § [SECTION SIGN] char \xAC ( 5 ) # ⠐ ¬ [NOT SIGN] char \xB5 (1 34 8) # ⢍ µ [MICRO SIGN] char \xB6 (1234 8) # ⢏ ¶ [PILCROW SIGN] char \x60 ( 6 ) # ⠠ ` [GRAVE ACCENT] char \x7E ( 2 6 8) # ⢢ ~ [TILDE] char \xA2 ( 5 8) # ⢐ ¢ [CENT SIGN] char \xA3 ( 4 67 ) # ⡨ £ [POUND SIGN] # Euro sign is not defined in the standard, but codepoint 0x80 of ISO-8859-13 is. # In Windows-1257, 0x80 is the Euro sign. # The unofficially distributed Lithuanian JAWS table specified all characters as # ANSI codes, thus rendering Euro as 457. # Not sure if I want to replicate that here though: who knows how this table will # end up being used and for how long. Aliasing to E instead. # char \u20AC ( 45 7 ) # ⡘ € [EURO SIGN] alias \u20AC \x45 # € [EURO SIGN] char \xA4 ( 4 678) # ⣨ ¤ [CURRENCY SIGN] char \xA9 (1234 6 8) # ⢯ © COPYRIGHT SIGN char \xAE (123 5 8) # ⢗ ® [REGISTERED SIGN] # Middle dot is unlikely to appear in text, except perhaps as a multiplication sign (dot operator). char \xB7 ( 3 7 ) # ⡄ · [MIDDLE DOT] char \xB0 ( 456 8) # ⢸ ° [DEGREE SIGN] char \xB9 (1 78) # ⣁ ¹ [SUPERSCRIPT ONE] char \xB2 (12 78) # ⣃ ² [SUPERSCRIPT TWO] char \xB3 (1 4 78) # ⣉ ³ [SUPERSCRIPT THREE] include common.tti