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by noduerme
716 days ago
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As a concept, neither is a typeface. But in printed form, whatever consistent lettering you use to represent an alphabet is a typeface. Why should a printed/raised lettering for Braille be considered any different from a typeface printed for any other alphabet? Or typefaces for logographic writing systems, for that matter? |
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Unified English Braille (the specification that maps dot combinations to English characters) is not a typeface, just like ASCII is not a typeface.
I Ould argue, however, that a specification like Marburg Medium[1], which specifies how Braille should be represented physically, how big the dots should be, how far apart they should be spaced etc, is a typeface.
[1] https://www.pharmabraille.com/pharmaceutical-braille/marburg...