02.10
OS X 10.* has a spelling checker built in. Although some programs have their own, most word processors/text editors in OS X use the built-in spelling check. Why not, Apple makes it easy. And in programs like web browsers you can have it spell check the contents of text boxes (Firefox on other platforms like Windows will do the same thing but I believe it has it’s own spelling checker).
You can configure OS X to use multiple spelling dictionaries. In different languages supported by OS X and user supplied dictionaries.
Sounds great. And it mostly works.
Learned something today. That “mostly” has limits.
I do most of my fic writing using a text editor called TextWrangler. Sort of a baby/lite version of BBEdit. Quite a few features considering the cost (free). For straight writing on a Mac? I think it’s one of the best.
If I want to use a “real” word processor (with fancy page formatting, etc.) I have Pages, a part of iWork. (I don’t use Pages very often yet. (Might change if I buy an iPad.) I rarely need a word processor — when I do I’m usually at work and I use MS Word.). I’ve tried assorted versions of Open Office but it just feels “clumsy” to me.
So… I have TextWrangler set to spell-check as I type. It normally works well. Speeds up the misspelled word finding. Doesn’t help with homophones, or other grammar issues. Or wrong words caused by typing errors. (e.g. In a fic I used ‘Hoe’ instead of ‘How’ in a sentence.)
It was pointed out to me the other day, that I spelled a word wrong – I spelled ‘panicking’ without the ‘k’. I corrected it and then tried to figure out why TextWrangler didn’t flag it as misspelled (Because it was acting as if it were correctly spelled and I couldn’t convince it otherwise. But if I looked for a definition for it in the dictionary, there wasn’t one.).
So, I stuffed ‘panicing’ into Pages and it correctly told me it was misspelled.
So then I played around with the spelling settings in OS X. And noticed that it was configured to use a LOT more dictionaries than I remember setting. Not just English. But also Russian, Germany, Polish, Japanese, etc. And I started turning off dictionaries. And found the problem.
When Dutch was one of the languages being used for spell checking, TextWrangler accepts ‘panicing’ but Pages doesn’t. (Not sure if panicing is the actual spelling of a Dutch word.)But they both use the same dictionary setting, so how’d it happen? No idea but there must be something different in how they actually use the dictionaries. Maybe they use them in a different order?
No idea, but at least it is fixed now.
Okay, don’t know if you’ve had the chance yet but I plugged ‘panicing’ into the first Dutch to English dictionary that came up in a search (Yahoo, not Google, I tend to ignore the conglomerate that is Google whenever I can) and it came back not found (or whatever). Maybe you should write to Mr Jobs and complain.
Dave
Yup. I looked for it in the same kind of thing/dictionary and came up empty also. But if I set it up to use ONLY the Dutch spelling dictionary, the only editor that has this problem is the non-Apple one so I don’t think Steve Jobs is going to take time out of his busy schedule of promoting the iPad to help with this one.