On Fri, 16 Dec 2005, Alan Horkan wrote:
>> But we're almighty curious. What is it doing, and why? How do you 
>> control it and use it?
>
> Grammar checking.
>
> Microsoft Word used green squiggles too but they were exactly the 
> same shape as the spelling error marks.  Abiword uses a slightly 
> different shape of squiggle for grammar checking to make it easier 
> to distinguish.
>
> I've not used it myself so hopefully others will give you more 
> details (or now that you know what it is it will be easier to find 
> out more).
         Strange. We're both grammarians (linguists, actually), and 
would never have guessed. I was going to read up on the thing when 
mention was first made here that one was going to be added, and 
should've guessed that might be it; but I never got around to doing 
the reading. I've got a sneakin' hunch the idea of grammar popular 
with the programmers & developers of that app may be rather 
dissimilar from ours, which is built on usage and history ....
         Anybody know offhand where the grammar-checker gets 
discussed? Maybe I can find time to work my way into it that way.
         In fact, for a while we guessed it might be marking new 
things. But it also happens in dialog, where people speak in 
fragments of sentences -- something the developers might want to 
think about.
         Anyway, it underlined whole phrases we could see nothing odd 
about, and also parts of words: I recall it hit the middle of the 
word 'scary' -- the 'car', I believe ....
-- RR 'Beartooth' Neuswanger <karhunhammas (at) lserv.com> Freedom is my issue : I'm pro-choice, pro-right-to-die, pro-gun, and pro-term-limits. Sine ferocia non libertas. ----------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe from this list, send a message to abiword-user-request@abisource.com with the word unsubscribe in the message body.Received on Sat Dec 17 21:20:52 2005
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