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Anglo-chauvinism
editI think wikipedia is heavily Anglo-chauvinsistic in notability issues.— Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.98.75.217 (talk • contribs) 00:27, December 11, 2007 (UTC)
- The English Wikipedia is Anglo-chauvinsistic, yes. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 217.28.177.57 (talk) 10:26, 8 October 2009 (UTC)
ASCII is not 8-bit
edit‘While MySpell uses 8-bit ASCII character encoding, Hunspell can use Unicode UTF-8-encoded dictionaries.’ I have the following issues with this statement:
- Actually, ASCII is a 7-bit encoding. It is, however, a very frequent error made by many people that assume that ASCII and various 8-bit encodings (usually for Western European languages, like ISO 8859-1, 5ISO 8859-15, and Windows-1252) are identical.
- It is true that ASCII is bit-for-bit compatible with most 8-bit encodings currently in usage (ISO 8859 family, Windows ‘ANSI’, DOS (MS ‘OEM’)) as far as the common characters are concerned (0x20–0x7F), but so it is with UTF-8 (and UTF-7, and numerous legacy multibyte encodings used for Asian languages). It is not compatible with IBM’s 8-bit family of EBCDIC encodings.
- In an encyclopædia, a higher standard of quality and accuracy is expected than in other publications, that can frequently get away with various simplifications and common mistakes.10:33, 7 November 2009 (UTC) —Preceding unsigned comment added by 118.92.181.98 (talk)
vim
editIt's my understanding that Vim can use converted hunspell lists (and others) but has an internal spellcheck so I removed it from the table.
http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/spell.html (especially the FORMAT WITH .AFF AND .DIC FILES and UNSUPPORTED ITEMS sections)
History needed
editA brief history of Hunspell and the software author, László Németh, is needed. As it stands, the article is little more than a one-line statement of what the program does. "László Németh" (or Németh László in native form) is apparently a popular Hungarian name, and a Web search returns a bewildering array of results. Wikipedia has a László Németh article, but it is about a long-dead dentist, writer, dramatist and essayist, not a linguist or computer programmer. — Quicksilver (Hydrargyrum)T @ 17:37, 13 July 2017 (UTC)