In addition to developing the braille code, Louis Braille invented tools for writing it. The braille slate (a type of stencil for writing braille by hand) and stylus are still used by blind people for tasks like making grocery lists, writing down telephone numbers, and other little things for which a sighted person might use a pencil and paper.
Braille had changed a lot since it was invented <3
Louis Braille died 6 January 1852.To read more louis-braille
Louis bro like is so cool
When Louis Braille was 3, he was playing with one of his father's tools called a Stitching awl. It was used to sew leather.http://wiki.answers.com/wiki/File:Sewing_awl.jpg
Braille developed in 1824 by 15 year old Louis Braille. Braille was blinded by an accident in his father's shop when he was 3.
Louis Braille overcame his blindness by developing a system of raised dots that can be read by touch. He used this system to create the braille alphabet, allowing blind individuals to read and write independently. His persistence and innovation have had a lasting impact on the lives of visually impaired people worldwide.
Before there was braille, books for the blind consisted of large 3-D letters. The books were very heavy and expensive. Louis got the idea for dots by hearing about the code the French army was using to deliver messages at night. The code was made up with dots and dashes which Louis simplified to dots. And then voila! A more sufficient way to make books for the blind.
Louis was blind at the age of 3 not very old and he died at the age of 43 not old.
he got blind when he was 3 got a sholarship when he was 10
Braille is a system used by many blind people. When Louis was 3, he poked himself in the eye with an awl, then the infection spread to the other eye. He used the same object that made him blind to create the system as we know as " Braille."
Braille is writing system which enables blind and partially sighted people to read and write through touch. It was invented by Louis Braille (1809-1852), who was blind and became a teacher of the blind. It consists of patterns of raised dots arranged in cells of up to six dots in a 3 x 2 configuration. Each cell represents a letter, numeral or punctuation mark. Some frequently used words and letter combinations also have their own single cell patterns
The Braille system is used to represent written text identified by touch rather than by sight. It consists of a 2-by-3 dot cell, where dots are raised according to predefined character patterns. A similar system was developed for the French army, with 12 dots per cell, but was never used. Louis Braille, who was blind, was inspired by the 12 dot system but simplified it so that an entire cell could be read without moving the reading finger. Devised in 1825.