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Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running
From: |
Eli Zaretskii |
Subject: |
Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running |
Date: |
Thu, 21 Feb 2019 16:59:17 +0200 |
> From: Titus von der Malsburg <address@hidden>
> Date: Thu, 21 Feb 2019 10:03:04 +0100
>
> [Note: The last to message in this branch were off list. My fault.]
>
> On 2019-02-21 Thu 04:36, Eli Zaretskii wrote:
> > [Why personal email?]
> >
> >> From: Titus von der Malsburg <address@hidden>
> >> Date: Wed, 20 Feb 2019 21:14:14 +0100
> >>
> >> > Then why do you use flyspell-buffer and not flyspell-region, each time
> >> > starting the region from the word where you decided to switch to
> >> > another language?
> >>
> >> That’s actually what happens when people just type: my package detects a
> >> new language and then just rechecks that paragraph. However, some users
> >> of my package are used to doing flyspell-buffer on complete files, and
> >> when they do that, they don’t get the result they expect (which is that
> >> each paragraph is checked in its own language). Checking a whole
> >> document with multiple languages does sound like a reasonable use case
> >> to me.
> >
> > Sorry, I still don't understand. When the user runs flyspell-buffer,
> > and you find that the language was changed, invoke
> > ispell-change-dictionary and after that invoke flyspell-region to
> > continue spell-checking from that place to the end of the document.
> > Repeat as needed. Wouldn't this algorithm work for your use case?
>
> This algorithm does do the job, but when the language changes a lot in a
> document it would be inefficient. Lets say you have 10 paragraphs, each
> in a different language, then you’d check the last paragraphs 10 times
> and only in the last pass with the correct language. Guess-language was
> written primarily to facilitate work with such multilingual documents.
> (I’m a linguist.) So that’s not a satisfying solution.
You don't have to end the region at the end of the document, you can
end it when your language guess changes.
> I can come up with a more efficient algorithm, no problem. It’s just
> that it would be the easiest and most efficient solution, if I could
> just abort and restart spell-checking when a change in language is
> detected. If flyspell doesn’t support this (aborting), tough luck.
Doesn't calling ispell-change-dictionary "abort" spell-checking
anyway? If it doesn't, can you show a recipe to see this in action?
(I never use flyspell-buffer, so changing the dictionary is trivial,
and restarts the speller as side effect.)
- Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running, Titus von der Malsburg, 2019/02/19
- Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running, Eli Zaretskii, 2019/02/20
- Message not available
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- Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running,
Eli Zaretskii <=
- Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running, Richard Stallman, 2019/02/20
- Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running, Eli Zaretskii, 2019/02/20
- Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running, Titus von der Malsburg, 2019/02/21
- Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running, Eli Zaretskii, 2019/02/21
- Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running, Joost Kremers, 2019/02/21
- Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running, Eli Zaretskii, 2019/02/21
- Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running, Titus von der Malsburg, 2019/02/21
- Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running, Eli Zaretskii, 2019/02/22
- Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running, Titus von der Malsburg, 2019/02/22
- Re: Changing dictionary while flyspell-buffer is running, Eli Zaretskii, 2019/02/22