Blame | Last modification | View Log | RSS feed
################################################################################ 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 - Ukrainian# modeled from Russian Braille table by Victor Tsaran <vtsaran@gmail.com># This is the Ukrainian braille table. It is based on the KOI8-U character set# which is the most used in Ukraine.# As the Ukrainian cyrillic definition conflicts with the latin definition, some# decisions had to be taken. Users of this table need to type both latin for the command# prompt and cyrillic while reading and writing documents and mail.# In the following, latin letters are quoted with apostrophes like in 'a', and# cyrillic letters are enclosed within brackets like in [a].# Dot 1 in the cyrillic definition is the cyrillic letter which looks and# sounds like 'a'. The problem is that in the KOI8-U character set, there is# both a latin 'a' and a cyrillic [a]. In decimal, their character numbers are# 97 and 193 respectively. To handle conflicts like these, we have prioritized# which characters are most important to match the standard.# RULES:# 1. All cyrillic characters must follow the Ukrainian standard. KOI8-U character# 193 [a] must be dot-1, and so on.# 2. Capital cyrillic letters have dot 7 on.# 3. The latin alphabet is implemented to follow the international standard# except it has dot 8 on.# 4. Capital latin letters have dots 7 and 8 on.# 5. Numbers are defined as in the American standard. This means dot-2 for# number '1', and so on. This will conflict with the cyrillic comma which is# also dot-2.# 4. Special characters like !"#¤%&/()=? follow the American standard if# possible.# 2. Control characters are often used on Linux. These are not very well# implemented. More work should be done.# Comments from Ukrainians are very welcome.include ltr-cyrillic.ttiinclude ltr-dot8.ttiinclude num-nemeth.ttiinclude punc-alternate.tti# generated by ttbtest: charset=koi8-uchar \u2219 ( 23 8) # 95 ⢆ ∙ [BULLET OPERATOR]char \xB0 ( 23 567 ) # 9C â¡¶ ° [DEGREE SIGN]char \xB2 ( 2 6 8) # 9D ⢢ ² [SUPERSCRIPT TWO]char \xB7 ( 345 78) # 9E ⣜ · [MIDDLE DOT]char \xA9 ( 34 678) # BF ⣬ © [COPYRIGHT SIGN]include common.tti