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The phrase "are difficult to read from" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing the readability of text or information that is being viewed from a certain source or location.
Example: "The instructions on the screen are difficult to read from a distance."
Alternatives: "hard to read from" or "not easily readable from".
Exact(2)
The site yields precise numerical results, and is thus more accurate than Figure 4, where, by necessity, precise values are difficult to read from the graphs.
While fancy fonts look pretty up close, they are difficult to read from afar.
Similar(58)
Unfortunately, that one is so bunched up that it's difficult to read from afar.
My notes from the evening are difficult to read, but if I have this right, they indicate that Dave's career in the league lasted 16 years; the average player's is 3.2 years.
But he added: "Most definitely they are difficult to read.
InChI is difficult to read for humans.
Longer entries are difficult to read on a computer screen.
For those of us who worked in Russia in Soviet times, it is difficult to read the news from Moscow these days without thinking back to those repressive years.
Even with 80,000 people packed in, it was difficult to read the crowd from inside the ring.
In this initial pilot test, heroin users revised some of item wording and responded that the CCBQ format was difficult to read since they usually read Mandarin from top to down and from right to left because of traditional Mandarin classes taught in schools.
We must deal with this minority in order to isolate and destroy it". It is difficult to read those words in isolation, divorced from their political and cinematic context, and not hear a shivery echo of recent headlines.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com